Showing posts with label marine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marine. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 October 2022

16 Great storm - acrylic on board

 


Great Storm   10x10cm acrylic on board   ©2022LisaLeQuelenec



'...great storm,

put all your winds to work

blowing their horns,

Set the whole night

galloping with its horses,'

                                                                                               Neruda


Available in my My Folksy store.




Great Storm   10x10cm acrylic on board   ©2022LisaLeQuelenec





Monday, 22 November 2021

Sailing where the sea met the sky - watercolour



Sailing where the sea met the sky   watercolour   ©2020 LisaLeQuelenec


 

We have been treated to some beautiful sunsets this Autumn, absolute stunners full of firey reds and oranges with rich cerise and purples. Breath taking as they are, my favourite kind to paint are these more mellow late summer ones. 

This painting is available in my Etsy store.


Friday, 26 July 2019

Turning tide - ghost print and mixed media




Turning Tide III   monoprint ghost print and mixed media 17.5x23cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


I have been working into the ghost prints from last weeks post. In reality the colours are too saturated and subtle for the camera to pick up, it has made it look very grainy and the subtle aquamarine is lost. Whilst trying to adjust the image digitally to a truer representation (not very successfully) I played with cropping the image. I might try some different versions using this format next time.



Turning Tide III (crop)   monoprint ghost print and mixed media 17.5x23cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


We are in the midst of a heatwave so I am keeping in the shade and wallowing in these blues.....there may be more to come.


Thursday, 18 July 2019

A little monoprinting... Turning Tide



Preparing a monoprint plate for printing   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec



I wish I could share the smell and sound of sticky ink as I roll a blend of colour. It is a very satisfying part of the process for the senses. The plate is a sheet of perspex (acrylic) the edges filed down and the corners rounded off. With the ink blend rollered on I begin to draw and paint with brushes, making marks and feeling the drag on the darker ink over the colour blend. Using a rubber tipped tool I make further marks lifting off areas of ink which will show as the white of the paper. The moon is a paper mask placed on top. Now it's ready to run through the press.


I place the plate face up on the metal bed of the press, line up a piece of dampened paper on top and cover over with a thick felt blanket. I turn the crank feeling the resistance as the plate and paper pass through the roller of the press then the give as it passes through the other side. Lifting the blanket and carefully peeling back the paper is always a moment of anticipation... you can never be 100% certain what will appear.




Turning Tide III   monoprint 19.5x27cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


This time I am pleased, the blend has covered well and there is a nice variety of marks. So after removing the paper moon mask and without adding or removing any more ink I run the plate through the press again with another piece of dampened paper to get what is called a ghost print.



Ghost print ©2019LisaLeQuelenec
There is much less ink to transfer onto the new piece of paper and a much more faded image results. I love these ghost prints for drawing on and playing with ideas for new work. They have become a part of my process now.

After cleaning off the plate of the remaining residual ink I am ready to start again. Once more a blended roll of colour the drawing/painting on top with a brush, removing ink, adding paper masks. Placing the print with its paper and blanket in the press and running it through. I almost always take a ghost print before cleaning the plate and starting the process again.

I find it a very meditative process but after a half dozen or so prints I start feel a little tired and my concentration starts to lag. Then I stop - look over the prints that I have made, take some quick photographs, evaluate and them place them within sheets of tissue paper that are then sandwiched between heavy boards and wait for them to dry. This can take a couple of weeks depending on how thick the ink is on the paper. Every few days I will change the tissue over for dry sheets and pop them back to bed between the boards.



Turning Tide II   monoprint 19.5x27cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Turning Tide I   monoprint 19.5x27cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


The original prints are available at Seaside Studios UK on Folksy  and reproduction prints and cards at RedBubble.



Thursday, 11 July 2019

Coastal collages and mixed media - a larger format.



Ocean View I   mixed media collage 30x30cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Working on a larger format and suddenly there is more air... space to breathe.... - they become more like my 'big empties'. The process feels longer, like pacing yourself for a days hike rather than a morning walk. Still I flit between abstractions and more recogniseable imagery...I am still searching for my answers.



Ocean View II   mixed media collage 30x30cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Ocean View III   mixed media collage 30x30cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Ocean View IV   mixed media collage 30x30cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


All of the above are available at Seaside Studios UK on Etsy.

Friday, 3 May 2019

Marine I - VI collage and mixed media



Marine I - VI   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


I have been playing with abstraction again over the last couple of weeks. Textures, edges and markmaking seem to be the common themes that are developing at the moment. Experiments with paint and ink application (rollering, spattering, frottage, resists, glazing, washes, drybrush, printing) in the making of the 'paper palettes' to collage together have been liberating and I have been using my colour notebook extensively to choose colour combinations. The backing paper for these is a creamy off white textured watercolour paper. It has warmed everything up over all. I think I will start working a little bigger now and compare a change of scale.

Whilst making these, each piece seemed to inform the next making me feel like I had taken a walk physically along the shore seeing the changing light over the course of a day, observing the colours, textures and changing temperatures.


All six are available at Seaside Studios UK on Etsy.





Marine I   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Marine II   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Marine III   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Marine IV   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Marine V   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec


Marine IVI   collage and mixed media 15x15cm   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec

Thursday, 25 April 2019

Coastal collages and mixed media



Coast I - IV   15.5x15.5cm each   mixed media and collage   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Four little-uns exploring some notes I made during the February project. I have been really enjoying working in this way. After the weekends hot spell and blazing sunshine my palette has brightened again. I seem to be very influenced by the weather and light - I wonder if this is a particularly British thing....we do talk about the weather a lot ;o)

All four are available at SeasidestudiosUK on Etsy.



Coast I   15.5x15.5cm mixed media and collage   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec




Coast II   15.5x15.5cm mixed media and collage   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec





Coast III   15.5x15.5cm mixed media and collage   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec





Coast IV   15.5x15.5cm mixed media and collage   ©2018LisaLeQuelenec






Monday, 15 April 2019

Etchings and drypoint prints shop updates


I have been catching up on printing for both SeasidestudiosUk on Etsy and Seasidestudiosuk on Folksy. There are now prints from both the 'Summer's Eve' , 'Ammonite' and 'Feather I' editions available for sale. All three are variable editions and each print that I do is unique in the handling of the ink and the overall effect of the print.



Summer's Eve   6x6cm etching   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec




Feather I   14.5x8cm drypoint   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec



Ammonite   15x20.5cm solar etching   ©2019LisaLeQuelenec

Thursday, 7 March 2019

Stripes on the shoreline - in conclusion



Stripes on the shoreline no.s 1 - 28   paper collages mounted individually on paper 15x20.5cm   ©2019Lisa Le Quelenec


When I started this project I didn't really have many preconceived ideas about where it was going to go, if anywhere at all. I was kind of 'giving myself permission' to try new things and play for a while whilst I worked on a big project that was going to require lots of brain work and technical learning. (more on that later..) The thirty minutes constraint was my 'play time' away to relax, reset and reward myself.


Seeing all the pieces laid out together I can see connections with the pebble project from last year which makes me think I am perhaps transitioning slowly but surely into a new way of working. Sometimes the process of evolving is so slow and incremental that I don't notice until I have travelled far down the path.  


Stripes from the shoreline no.8   paper collage mounted on paper 15x20.5cm   ©2019Lisa Le Quelenec


I had thought I would end up with a whole project of completely minimalist pieces after the first few days. I was very surprised that it only took seven days for me to start gravitating to recognisable imagery from more pure abstract leanings. It seemed like the sediment of ideas was starting to settle a bit and a clearer way forward was emerging at around day 8 along with the realisation that the project was becoming just about the groynes and their relation to the environment they were placed in and their defiance in the face of the elements.


When I first moved to Bournemouth the groynes seemed really odd, cumbersome and out of place. I was used to wide open sand with nothing in the way. They frustrated me somewhat as they got in the way of walking on the beach as depending on how much the sea and wind has shifted the sand they can stand quite high from the beach so you end up walking in a big zig zag up and down and not really getting too far. Now I am used to them they are part of the furniture of the beach and I don't 'see' them. I'm starting really see them again after this project and feel like I want to explore them much more and in detail.


Stripes from the shoreline no.12   paper collage mounted on paper 15x20.5cm   ©2019Lisa Le Quelenec


Although I had flirted with the idea of a moon symbol in the squares from day 6, I'm not sure I realised it at the time. By day 12 I was ready to embrace it for a while. It felt good to have some curves, just a little bit of softness with all the hard edges.

A lightening of the palette occurred at day 18 which coincided with a noticeable lengthening of the days for me. I find February dark and dismal it always seems reluctant to let Winter go and Spring to begin. I always find myself feeling impatient during this month. My energy levels were starting to increase and things feel more positive with the changing of the light. The further on in the month the warmer the palette starts to feel too - I don't think this was a conscious decision, just an indication of how influenced I am by my environment. We had the warmest day in February since records began on the 25th.


©2019LisaLeQuelenec


As a way of getting through the month it was very productive and I think I will find another project for next year using a similar strategy. I really looked forward to the part of the day where I could make the next piece. Next time though I will record and document them in batches as doing it everyday was problematic at times with a school half term and a virus that hit our household and then chicken pox arrived...even the dog was sick for a couple of days which didn't help. That was the only aspect of the project that felt pressured though ( I think due to the scale of work) - making the work felt like a natural flow and progression.

I have found the time constraint of the project to be one of the most valuable lessons. It really helped to focus the mind away from distractions some days, on others to slow down and think in more depth about the process. It is definitely an aspect that I will use going forward - especially on days that are about generating ideas and experimenting. As well, these pieces are very small scale and I think I would like to use the same process but larger so I will continue for a while along side other projects to see where that leads. A few of the pieces feel like starting points for more work, they are seeds of ideas that I would like to explore further.



All pieces are available at Folksy and reproductions and cards at Red Bubble.


Thursday, 14 February 2019

Stripes on the shoreline no.14



Stripes from the shoreline no.1   paper collage mounted on paper 15x20.5cm   ©2019Lisa Le Quelenec



Whilst there are no verticals in this landscape I do think the range of tones makes this one successful.


Halfway through the project and whilst I started off in a very abstract way I seem to have moved quickly back to recognisable motifs. I have been good at sticking to the ‘rules’ that I have imposed on myself. The time element has been the most useful part of the exercise so far. Some days it feels like a long time but it’s good in that it slows me down for a more considered work on others it feels far to short and so stops procrastination in its tracks. This was unexpected and may well be one of the things that I use going forward in other work.


This collage is available at Folksy.

Available as a reproduction at Red Bubble.

Wednesday, 13 February 2019

Stripes on the shoreline no.13



Stripes from the shoreline no.13   paper collage mounted on paper 15x20.5cm   ©2019Lisa Le Quelenec


13 - Unlucky for some…. I rather like this one.


This collage is available at Folksy.