Showing posts with label Evans Encaustics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evans Encaustics. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2010

The Questionnaire: Joanne Mattera

The Questionnaire is meant to be a lighter version of a bio, a little more revealing in some respects and personal without all the facts bogging it down. I supply the questions and the respondents supply the answers. Either one or both of us supply the images. 

For this interview, Joanne supplied the images and the captions for the images.


           J o a n n e  M a t t e r a          


What is your favorite color?

Red, from orange red to blue red. I like that you can have those complements in one hue. Also, do you know I have a paint named after me? Joanne Loves This Red (from Evans Encaustics).


Uttar 286 in the window of Arden Gallery, Boston, in December 2008, for my show, Contemplating the Horizontal. JM photo




Hue Again, a 2008 installation view of my solo show at an academic gallery north of Boston, with a view of Ciel Rouge, a four-panel painting, 48 x 57 inches. JM photo




I like red that works its way into orange. This is Soie 5, part of a series I did this summer, in gouache. It's 22 x 30 inches, Arches 140 lb hot press paper. Much as I love encaustic, I love and work in other mediums, too. My middle name, as you may know, is I-Am-Not-An-Encaustic-Artist. JM photo.




This red-with-orange-undertones paint is named after me, Joanne Loves This Red, by Evans Encaustics. I had a cow named after me once, too. Photo: Evans Encaustics.



What is your favorite word?

Yes.


An impromptu picture taken in the studio a couple of years ago. Photo: Claudia Saimbert.


What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally?

Creatively: going into the studio and allowing my brain to click into that place where “it” happens; spiritually: centeredness; emotionally: humor, wit, beauty




You asked what turns me on creatively. It's going into the studio. Entering the space I have set up for artmaking allows my brain to switch to a different channel. For almost 20 years I had a 9-5 job, and when I got into the studio in the evening, there was no time to futz. I had four good hours before hunger and tiredness sent me home. When the key clicked in the lock, something clicked in my brain. I've been able to retain that "switch" even now that I'm painting full time. This shot was one of several taken for a postcard of a 2006 show in Atlanta, so the studio is cleaner than usual--but it's typically organized. That's how I like to work. JM photo.




An installation shot from Luxe, Calme et Volupte: A Meditation on Visual Pleasure, which I curated for the Marcia Wood Gallery in Atlanta in 2007. You can view the online catalog, which has an essay by me here. In this photo: Heather Hutchison in the far gallery, Frances Barth, Tim McFarlane. JM photo.




Peeking into the back gallery, there's Tim McDowell, left, and a closer view of Hutchison's painting. These were the only two works in encaustic in the show. Luminosity is the reason they were installed near one another, just as geometric composition is the reason the paintings below were installed together. JM photo.




In a third gallery--this was a big show with 14 artists that stayed up for two months--you see two paintings by Julie Gross, left, and two by Julie Karabenick. On the floor is a marble sculpture by Julia Venske and Gregor Spanle. JM photo.


What turns you off?

Incompetence, deviousness, lateness



What profession other than artist would you most like to be?

I usually say “Curator” because I plan to return as a curator in my next life, but my fantasy is to be a conga drummer



But what I really want to be is a conga drummer. This is me in 1996 in my Union Square studio in Manhattan. Dig that platinum hair!



What is your favorite book or movie?

This may be very un-lesbian of me but I loved Marcello Mastroianni, so any movie with him. And there were many wonderful ones in which he played gay men, or old men; he wasn’t just the stereotypical “latin lover.” Also, movies with him usually included Sophia Loren, Claudia Cardinale, Stefania Sandrelli, Catherine Deneuve and were directed by Fellini or Vittorio De Sica or Vittorio Gasman, and had music by Nino Rota. Notice the thread here?


Here's how much I love Marcello: When my publishing job ended in 1998, I spent two weeks at the Marcello Mastroianni Film Festival at the Walter Reade Theatre at Lincoln Center. I knew I'd never have that kind of time again, so I went every day to see one, sometimes two, Marcello movies. Image via the Internet.




Of course I also got to see Sophia Loren, Anita Ekberg, Catherine Deneuve and other actors. This is the young Sophia, when she was still acting only in Italian. Image via the Internet.



Who is your favorite musician, musical group or style of music?

Latin music, from traditional Cuban singers like Celina Gonzalez to contemporary traditional like Albita and Celia Cruz (her rendition of “I Will Survive” in Spanish surpasses even Gloria Gaynor’s classic); to latin jazz via Tito Puente, Eddie Palmieri, Chico O’Farrill, Bobby Sanabria and Canadian flutist Jane Bunnett. I just wish there more women in the percussion section. Conga drumming women are heartstopping.


Latin music is my passion, from traditional Cuban to jazz. For several years in New York I went to every concert of Celia Cruz and Tito Puente--sometimes they performed together--because they were getting older and I wanted to see as much of them as possible before they passed. They were great performers as well as musicians. Image via the Internet.


What do you most value in your friends?

Honesty, generosity, responsibility, reliability, which I am more than happy to reciprocate



Name three artists whose work has influenced your own or whose work you most relate to.

Artists I relate to: Agnes Martin for her visual purity; the Siennese painters of the Renaissance for the gloriousness of their color; Martin Puryear for the materiality and mystery of his sculptures.


There was a wonderful Agnes Martin retrospective at the Whitney about a decade ago. You could see the work get purer and more breathlike as she got older. I admire her monasticism, but I want to be more out in the world as an artist. Photo: Charles R. Rushton, via the Internet.




Giovanni di Paolo's Creation of the World and Expulsion from Paradise, about 1445, is an abstraction of a dimensional universe. This is before Columbus sailed across the ocean, when most people though the earth was on a plate. You can see this image in the Lehman Wing at the Met. Photo: Metropolitan Museum of Art, via the Internet.




My favorite painter is known only as the Master of the Osservanza--a monk named for a church in Sienna where one of his works is placed. His paintings have a kind of abstraction that's contemporary. Look at that sky; it's like a Clyfford Still painting! This is St. Anthony Tempted by a Heap of Gold, about 1435. The heap is missing--maybe someone else was tempted and scraped off the gold--but a pentimento is visible between the hare in the left corner and the figure of St. Anthony. Image via the Internet.




I saw the Martin Puryear retrospective at MoMA in 2007 and wrote about it here. Puryear taps into a collective idea of culture, of what it means to be a human who dreams, who works, who makes things. JM photo.




I have to give you one more name: Eve Hesse, who combined minimalism and materiality in a way that has been a beacon for me.


Eva Hesse has been my hero since art school. I respond to her use of materiality in the service of a minimalist vision, something I have been similarly involved with. I wrote about her 2006 show, Eva Hesse: Sculpture, at the Jewish Museum here and more recently on Eva Hesse: Test Pieces at Hauser & Wirth here. Image via the internet.



Name an artist whose work you admire but which may be unlike yours.

I’m giving you three: a painter, Joan Mitchell; a sculptor, Jackie Winsor; and that force of nature, Louise Bourgeois.


Joan Mitchell did something with gesture and color that moves me. Her pastels, in particular, have an immediacy that pulls me in. Her fingerprints are all over the work, a kind of living reminder of the artist making the work. Photo: Cheim and Read Gallery, via the Internet.



I am hugely enamored of Jackie Winsor's cubes from the Seventies. A recent show at the Paula Cooper gallery brought together a good deal of her early work, including this one. JM photo.


Louise Bourgeois is the original "material girl," having worked in all kinds of mediums from plaster to cloth to marble to wood, without allowing herself to be pigeonholed by medium. I wrote about her 2008 retrospective at the Guggenheim here. JM photo.


What is your idea of earthly happiness?

Sitting on a beach in summer in the late afernoon looking out at the horizon as the sun shines on the water and the sand retains its warmth. On another day I might tell you it’s snorkeling in the Caribbean after a couple of tokes, or being anywhere in Italy.




This is not me sitting at the water's edge--I pulled the image from the Internet--but it could have been. I like to put my chair in the water and look out at the meeting of heaven and earth. This image might even be of Herring Cove, the beach in Provincetown where I spend part of every summer. The light there is extraordinary.




Another bit of earthly happiness in Italy. This happens to be Napoli, home of yin and yang Italian style, where beauty coexists with traffic and trash.




What I did this summer: a series of gouache-on-paper paintings called Soie, silk. The series came from the print I did in June at Connecticut College, part of a printmaking project I wrote about here. JM photo.




The cover of The Art of Encaustic Painting, published in 2001 and now in its seventh printing. (A note from NN--still The best of all the books on encaustic.)


For more of Joanne Mattera's work and writing:


joannemattera.blogspot.com
www.joannemattera.com
encausticconference.blogspot.com/



Saturday, September 25, 2010

Running Stitch Continues To Sprint

Tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap,
tap, tap, tap, etc.

That's me making this work. Wouldn't you like to be my studio neighbor? (I did some work with tacks similar to this years back when I lived in an artists' building, and my neighbor was ready to tear her hair out - or maybe it was my hair she was after. Luckily I'm now in a work-only building.)

Note: Click on the images to enlarge them.



Bandeau Green, wax-based assemblage on joined birch panels, 24"H x 42"W x 1.75"D



These works are part of the continuing Running Stitch Series that I showed you earlier this month. They are composed of materials such as book covers cut in strips, pieces of treated metal, dipped book pages, rubber, various textural pieces and painted matboard cut into strips. After I attach these materials to the birch panels with tacks (thus the tap, tap, tap), I paint encaustic between and over the strips. I fuse the encaustic with a heated tool (a shoe) as the final step in the process.




Bandito, 24" x 24" x 1.75", on one birch panel






Closeup of Bandito




And, finally, breaking out of the green mode, I've moved on to red.





Untitled Red, diptych 24"H x 42"W x 1.75"D (a less than perfect photo)






A side view of the piece showing more surface texture






Closeup of completed red piece. Can you identify the rounded rectangle shapes?




As I said above, the final step in making this work is to add the encaustic paint on top after all the construction is done. In the image below, I show you the difference between a panel with and a panel without the final coat.



The narrower panel on the left has the final coat of dark red encaustic added, the right panel does not. This shows how the final coat unifies the elements of the construction. (This is much more visible when you click to enlarge.)



And finally, here is an image of some of the painted matboard I used. I first painted this (archival) matboard with Evans Encaustic burnt sienna Holy Grail and then painted on a coat of red and/or orange encaustic. I fused it with a heat gun and let it cool before cutting it into strips. The pinkish-brownish strips in this photo were made from matboard painted with a grainy ink, let dry and then overpainted with very thin pink encaustic. (I am going to write a rave review a little later about Evans Encaustic holy grail encaustic gesso now available in colors. It is fabulous!)




Painted matboard pieces



Monday, August 9, 2010

The Questionnaire: Hylla Evans

The Questionnaire is meant to be a lighter version of a bio, a little more revealing in some respects and personal without all the facts bogging it down. I supply the questions and the respondents supply the answers. Either one or both of us supply the images.


                 H y l l a  E v a n s               



What is your favorite color?

Light violet-blue gray 




Hylla's sample of her favorite color





What is your favorite word?

Yes 




What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally?

Daydreaming, planning, down time with friends




What turns you off?

Meanness, rudeness, inappropriate use of apostrophes




What profession other than artist would you most like to be?

Teacher/facilitator and paintmaker 







What is your favorite book or movie?

At this moment, Munich (movie), Melting the Darkness by Warren Poland (book) 





Who is your favorite musician, musical group or style of music?

Rock 



What do you most value in your friends?

Loyalty and humor 


Hylla with Eloise at 8 weeks



Name three artists whose work has influenced your own or whose work you most relate to.


Vincent van Gogh, Rembrandt, Alice Neel, Paul McCartney 



Vincent van Gogh, La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle), 1889, oil on canvas, 36 1/2 x 29 inches



Rembrandt van Rijn, "Herman Doomer," 1640




Paul McCartney, "The Queen Getting a Joke," 1991







Alice Neel, "Nancy and Olivia," 1967








Name an artist whose work you admire but which may be unlike yours.

Joanne Mattera 


Joanne Mattera, "Vicolo 7," 2004, 12 x 12 inches





What is your idea of earthly happiness?

Family and friends together on the farm laughing





Friday, June 11, 2010

Live from the Encaustic Conference

I arrived at the Fourth Annual Encaustic Conference at Montserrat College of Art about 5:00 p.m. on Thursday night. There was a moderate amount of activity - early arrivals were registering and checking into the dorm and vendors were setting up their tables. Here are a LOT of images. (Note that you can click on the images to expand them to a larger size.)



First view of Best Foot Forward in the second floor hallway of the Hardie Building. This shot was taken around 6:00 p.m. Thursday night.



Here's a view looking in the other direction.

I'll be posting more images of Best Foot Forward as people arrive and hang their work.

VENDORS
Vendors open at 10:00 a.m. this morning (Friday). What great products they have! And some special sale items also.


Hylla Evans of Evans Encaustics - her usual wonderful colors plus those great hake brushes in 3 sizes



R and F Paints - great "scratch and dent" sale on pigment sticks!



Conrad Wilde paints and other supplies - luscious colors



Rodney Thompson's fabulous panels




Enkaustikos paints - a large selection of paints, brushes and tools



New vendor Kama Pigments has lots more than pigments...



including these fabulous giant spatulas

I have left out Paul Roland's encaustic hotboxes for monotypes and all the great encaustic books, including the beautiful new book by Daniella Woolf - but more about those in the next post.


WAX LIBRIS II - The Library Show

I scurried in and took a few shots in the library. I wanted to see how my own work looked of course. So here are a few - not intended to be all inclusive but just to whet your appetite for more.



This show was curated by Joanne Mattera and nicely installed in this book shelf and on the surrounding walls. My three deconstructed book works are on the wall at the left.



Top shelf: Julie Shaw Lutts (sorry I cut off the top of her work), middle shelf Miles Conrad and bottom shelf Gwen Plunkett.



Two works by Laura Moriarty, sort of geology in book form.



Top shelf left Deanna Wood and right Cynthia Winika. Bottom shelf Josie Rodriguez.



A work by Sandi Miot (sorry I don't have the title).



Installation of work with found objects and book covers by Mindy Nierenberg.


This is a long, image-filled post but I thought you might like to see some familiar faces from previous conferences. It is really great to connect with people in person.


THE LUMINOUS LANDSCAPE - the opening of the show at the Kensington Stobart Gallery in Salem.


Many of the early arrivals at the conference headed over to Salem for this opening of encaustic works in the gallery at the Hawthorne Hotel in Salem. The place was packed and it was a little difficult to see the work. So instead, I'm just showing you a few crowd pictures (and featured individuals). You'll have to get to Salem to see the work at a less crowded time. Click to get Kensington Stobart Gallery hours, directions and info.



New England Wax member Deb Claffey in the doorway to the gallery.



Greg Wright and Kellie Weeks, also NE Wax members.



Greg with his dynamic painting displayed in the gallery window



A shot from the opening - in center Charyl Weissbach, also a NEW member and an organizer of the LL group



What an appealing assortment of food presented by the gallery! And so refreshing to see fruit and vegetables instead of the dreary taco chips and salsa.



A shot of the opening crowd. See any familiar heads?



Another shot that also shows that some paintings were hanging on the wall.

Whew! What a lot of photos. I'll be back with more later.