Q: Can you discuss your process, including how you actually use Mexican and Guatemalan folk art figures in your art?
A: When I set up the figures to photograph for a painting, I work very intuitively, so how I actually cast them in an artwork is difficult to say. Looks count a lot – I select an object and put it in a particular place, look at it, move it or let it stay, and sometimes develop a storyline. I spend time arranging lights and looking for interesting cast shadows. With my first “Domestic Threats” series, all of this was done so that Bryan, my late husband, or I could shoot a couple of negatives with his Toyo Omega 4″ x 5″ view camera. For my “Black Paintings” series, begun in 2007, I shoot medium format negatives with a Mamiya 6 camera.
I always look at a 20″ x 24″ photograph for reference as I make a pastel-on-sandpaper painting, plus I also work from the ‘live’ objects. The photograph is mainly a catalyst because finished paintings are always quite different from their associated reference photos. Also, since I spend months creating them, the paintings’ interpretative development goes way beyond that of the photo.
I once completed 6 large (58” x 38”) pastel paintings in a single year, but more recently 4 or 5 per year is common. It takes approximately 3 months to make each one. During that time I layer and blend together as many as 25 to 30 layers of pastel. Of course, the colors get more intense as the painting progresses and the pigment accumulates on the sandpaper.
Comments are welcome!
Posted on December 21, 2013, in 2013, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Domestic Threats, Inspiration, Mexico, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Photography, Studio, Travel, Working methods and tagged accumulates, approximately, arranging, art, artwork, associated, beyond, Black Paintings, blend, Bryan, camera, cast, catalyst, colors, common, completed, corner, count, couple, creating, develop, development, different, difficult, discuss, Domestic Threats, during, figures, finished, Guatemalan, husband, intense, interesting, interpretative, intuitively, layer, lights, live, look, make, Mamiya 6, medium format, Mexican, move, negatives, object, painting, particular, pastel, pastel-on-sandpaper, photograph, pigment, place, process, progresses, recently, reference, sandpaper, select, series, shadows, shoot, single, sometimes, spend, storyline, Studio, time, together, Toyo-Omega, view camera, work, year. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
What a cool scene you have going in your studio – I would like to see 4 x 5 photos some time as well – some time ..
Peter, I gave photos for sale that I shot with my medium format Mamiya 6, but nothing shot with my 4×5 view camera. Go to http://www.barbararachko.com and click Photographs.