Sunday 9 November 2014

Folding to create mass.

     Origami is a technique which has become an important component in my work. It grew from my interest in layers of paint, and realising that a sheet of paper can lie flush against a wall or surface. I found that many sheets upon each other become a physical mass, and I feel this was a significant breakthrough for my work, and became one of the main techniques I now use when producing paintings.
     One piece of flat paper can be folded into a range of shapes, which consequently become three dimensional shapes. Each individual piece takes up physical space, reflects light in different ways and for me, allows me to consider the space behind it, as well as the space it takes up and interacts with.
     From this I wanted to incorporate traditional painting materials such as canvas and paint, and attempted to find a way of folding canvas while manipulating it to retain its shape once constructed. I explored a range of materials on the canvas such as paint, varnish, glue, rabbit skin glue, starch, primers and many more to produce the desired effect. I found that rabbit skin glue was the most effective and created a crisp surface that was rigid enough to preserve this once folded.
     I began to work on a larger scale, and this is something I produced earlier in the year.






2 comments:

  1. This was one piece of canvas?! Was it heavy?

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  2. Hi Simon, yes it was one piece, 6 meters in length. Once I had applied the layers of rabbit skin glue it did become very heavy and was a task to fold - but was worth it!

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