Found art

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Composition in Blue and Sienna
© 2003

My obsession with working abstractly has probably been fed by two things over the years: one – working with the quilt medium, which, if done with traditional patterns, involves working largely with geometric shapes, and two – if I can be honest here – the fact that I’m not too great at drawing or painting realistically. All that notwithstanding, however, I find I much prefer to look at abstract art rather than realistically painted scenes. But I’ll leave the whys and wherefores of that preference for a later date.

My real point here is that once you get into the habit of seeing, you realize that abstract compositions are all around you, until finally you get to the point where you can’t not see them. The above photo was taken at a construction site several years ago. Unfortunately, that was long before I had any ideas of writing a blog, and I was not in the habit of taking detailed notes about what I was photographing. So I’m not totally sure what this was – maybe the side of a vehicle or a container of some sort. I was making pictures of things that I thought might turn into compositions or possibly become elements for photomontage work. I have not done any Photoshopping on this image other than cropping it into a square composition.

I would like to think of some kind of a creative name for my series of similar images and possibly publish them as limited edition prints. But what would be a good name? “Found art”? “Discoveries”? “Serendipity”? Hmmm … keep thinking …

I’m not alone in my taste for what makes a great image. Check out these great photos by the very talented Jeanne Williamson. Amazing shades of blue!

January 20th, 2008|Inspiration, Photography|4 Comments

More on the Façade series

Deidre Adams – Façade III: Red Oxide

Façade III: Red Oxide
38 x 61 inches, ©2008

This piece and Façade IV: Chrome Oxide will be included in a show called Distinctive Directions at the Lux Center for the Arts in Lincoln, Nebraska, April 4 – 26, 2008. The show is curated by Lisa Call and features artists Pam RuBert, Joanie San Chirico, and Jeanne Williamson, and will be shown in conjunction with a solo show by Lisa Call, Fencing in or Keeping Out.

As mentioned in my last post, this work is inspired by surfaces of exterior walls of old buildings. While the sources are many, and the final piece is a composite of many things, I do have one image that relates rather directly to this piece.

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Rusty Building, ©2002

This is from the side of what may have once been a mill for processing ore, located in Central City, a former mining town and now gambling town, in the mountains west of Denver. Although I took this photo over five years ago, I never made any art directly related to it, and even now I only noticed the resemblance after I was done with the piece. I do think that everything I’ve ever found inspiring, and especially those things that I’ve taken photos of, has stayed with me somewhere deep in my mind and contributes somehow to the overall aesthetic of my work.

January 11th, 2008|Inspiration|Comments Off on More on the Façade series