2023 My Weekly Project

Week 22 – Go and Look for Shadows

On a recent day out to the delightful Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens at Gulval, near Penzance I became aware of the wonderful shadows that played out on a variety of surfaces.

The more I looked the more I saw. Shadows are so engaging but often they are overlooked as a source of creative inspiration in their own right.

The Organic Nature of Shadows

Shadows move and change all the time. They are not static, regular or controllable. They are uncomplicated and beautiful in their own way. They are a form of natural creativity which seems to be effortlessly perfect. They are short-livid or momentary.

One of my favourite books is Wabi-Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets and Philosophers

Wabi-Sabi is a Japanese aesthetic. It acknowledges the beauty in things which are unconventional, humble and modest. It recognises the incomplete, imperfect and impermanent.

I feel that these photographs of shadows are a fine example of Wabi-Sabi.

Surfaces

Prior to walking around the gardens I had visited the exhibition in the gallery. By sheer coincidence I had begun to think about sourcing alternative surfaces on which to progress my own work.

Shadows play out on a variety of surfaces. Gravel pathways, rocks and stones, leaves, grass, wood, walls, metal and fabric. It reminded me of the time I used solar dyes to make some images from the plants in the garden at home.

They can appear wispy and delicate. The forms can overlay and overlap for intensity. There can be fine lines, blocks of form and imaginative imagery.

Surface texture with its own line, indentations, spaces and existing patterning can add further to the creative dimension.

Once I had seen a number of shadows I just kept seeing more

The Big Green Grasshopper and the Potted Plant

To my sudden surprise and delight I spotted a large grasshopper. I tried, as we all do, to capture a good clear photograph. But it was tucked in on the other side of the vegetation. Despite my efforts to reposition myself on the edge of the border I could not get the “snap” I thought I wanted.

It was then that I saw the shadow.

Later on as I was leaving the gardens I glanced across into the plant sales area. The shadow on the side of the metal container caught my eye more than the plant in it.

Two great images to complete my search for shadows this week.

2023 – My Weekly Project

Week 21 – Frame a View Somewhere New

It’s so refreshing to visit somewhere that is new and unexplored. Recently I took a trip to Richmond in the Yorkshire Dales. I have never been to Yorkshire. Richmond is a market town with the largest cobbled market square in Europe. It has the oldest theatre in the country and is known as the “gateway to the Dales”.

Framing

All too often we use the camera to “frame” the image we want to capture. For this exercise I took a frame with me and included this in the photographs I took. Fortunately my husband was with me and he held the frame. Otherwise I had a couple of clamps to use if I was able to find something to fix them to.

So Much To See

Taking in a new view can be quite overwhelming. Especially one which was admired and painted by JMW Turner. This view of Richmond Castle from Maison Dieu is a landscape to inspire any artist. Turner visited Richmond in 1816 and apart from the natural expansion of the town over the years it is little unchanged. The castle remains the main focus.

Simplifying the View

The mountboard frame I took with me was possibly larger than I needed. However it proved quite effective. Having someone to help was a great advantage. It was quite challenging to get the camera and the frame parallel with each other. Maybe next time I will just clamp the frame to a support and take whatever image is within the frame.

Another project for another day.

2023 – My Weekly Project

Week 19 – Some Sorting and Reorganising

Time for some sorting and reorganising this week.

I had been given a large bag of unwanted buttons at an event recently. Adding them to my existing collection I decided it was time to sort and reorganise them all.

These buttons come from mother’s, grandmother’s and great grandmother’s collections. Handed down and added to with each generation. Most families seem to share this practice and those of a certain generation can recall being given the button box to play with! How would our children and young people react to this today?

Getting Started

As with most things it is always that first move that starts the ball rolling. Or in this case the buttons spilling out all over the table. But once I began it was quite relaxing sorting them into their colours. At times I stopped to admire a particular button wondering when it last saw the light of day.

It is a challenge to find a suitable use for them and its unthinkable that they should be thrown away.

Display

It would have been all too easy to repackage the buttons into plastic bags and put them back in the cupboard. So I decided to make a display of them and sourced some small sliver lidded jam jars. I had plenty of white, black, grey and brown buttons to more than fill the jars. Other colours such as red, orange, blue and green were limited in number. They make a welcome addition to the shelf in my studio now and seeing them may help me come up with some creative ideas in the coming days.

Good Therapy

There is a good feeling that accompanies some sorting and tidying. The very process itself is calming and can help focus the mind. Seeing my little jars of buttons in this way is so much better than occasionally moving the big box out of the way when trying to find something else in the cupboard. In fact I took them to a local market and they were admired as part of the display.

2023 – My Weekly Project

Week 18 – Simply Sourced Words

This week’s challenge is all about taking a chance with words. The intention is to use some randomly selected words and put them together into a paragraph, a poem, a piece of prose or any other format to suit.

Finding Random Words

To begin I picked up an edition of the Countryfile magazine I had received back in 2018. I don’t like recycling these and tend to keep them for future reference. I went through the pages and noted in a book the page number and “word” I had selected. I set a limit of twenty words.

I then proceeded to cut the words out of the pages of the magazine and began to see how they could fit together. There were a couple of lines that came together quite quickly. For the others I had to mix and match. It amazed me that I successfully managed to use all twenty words.

Renewal and Reward

Matured Islands are Unveiled

Where Seven Friends Saunter

Taking in a Tonic of Holy Sound

Watched by an Audience of Green Eagles

A Blessed Haven in a Swathe of Water

An Environment to Think, Imagine and Embroider