Showing posts with label Recycled Materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recycled Materials. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 July 2022

Make Art, Not War


Mixed Media Collage of Sketchbook Cover
Make Art, Not War (2017) ⓒ Nicole Moore
Make Art, Not War
2017
Mixed Media Collage
8.3 x 11.7 inches

This month I wanted to feature Make Art, Not War , a mixed media collage made as part of a 2017 'Have You Made Art Today?' project to decorate my first sketchbook cover. In my case, it gave my sketchbook an identity. 


Recycled materials used were strips of red, yellow, and green wrapping paper, plus items from a Vogue Magazine — a red 'spiral' shape and an A4 size sheet of art text, which I cut up and rearranged vertically and horizontally. Also in the magazine was a small 'Make Art, Not War' image. I replaced this original image with a cutout copy of a headshot photograph of myself taken in the 1980s by a friend named Lennox. At the time the photograph was taken, I was holding Lennox's newborn baby daughter Kadesha, hence the smile! 

'Make Art, Not War' is a popular slogan for artwork; an alternative phrase inspired by the popular 1960s anti-war mantra, "Make love, not war." There are numerous examples of the 'original' 'Make Art, Not War' image on the Internet. 

My version of Make Art, Not War is both optimistic and political. In this current climate of war in numerous countries around the globe, it helps to take time to consider how we would like the world to be. Whilst making the artwork, I imagined how different our world could be if we made art, and made ourselves participate in creativity of all shapes and forms, rather than be at war, not only within the world but with the natural environment. 

What does peace mean to you?

Comments welcome!

Thanks for reading.

Sunday, 26 June 2022

Art Matters


Art Matters  2017 ⓒ Nicole Moore
 Art Matters

 2017
 8.5 x 12.5 inches
 Mixed Media Newspaper   Abstract Collage


This collage was made in an environmentally-friendly way, using recycled materials mounted on a used piece of cardboard, that was originally a parcel envelope.

The beauty of making a collage is that there are no rules, although 'good' composition is important in terms of harmony. Really, there are numerous ways of making a collage since you can assemble multiple textures, materials and colours; it is a fluid and flexible artwork process. You can even create new collages by reworking old ones, plus you can add paint. The sky's the limit!😊

Magazines & Newspapers:

For my Art Matters collage, I used a simple technique of tearing up pages from a copy of The Guardian Newspaper, pasting them over or near one another using a Liquitex Matte Gel medium, and applying surfaces in some kind of colour scheme. I selected the newspaper pages that drew me to them because of their cool blue and green tones, and then I added imagery of cars and people with umbrellas. The section where the traffic lights and buildings are placed upside down is deliberate. I paid less attention to the context and content of the newspaper pages. I was more interested in assembling shapes and creating something new. I did, however, choose the additional text/phrases carefully. The final piece is offered to the viewer as a long read.

Art Matters:

When I made the Art Matters collage (2017), it was the year after the then-Chancellor abolished maintenance grants for lower-income students. University student fees in England also increased from £9,000 to £9,250 in the same year for full-time students and from £4,500  to £4,625 for part-time students. 

As I reflect back on when I was a mature student studying for a BA degree at the University of Westminster in the 1980s, aged 28, I am grateful that not only did I have no fees to pay, but I also received a grant towards my living expenses. Those days are long gone. However, I haven't stopped valuing education, probably because of disruptions to my secondary education in the early days for all manner of reasons.  

Fast forward to modern times, and university fees continue to be barriers to higher education, and universities are run more like an enterprise than an educational place of learning. You can't blame the younger generation of potential students fresh out of school or college for being reluctant to apply for a student loan, knowing that they are going to end up in debt. The problem with this dilemma is that the arts and creative industries will end up being elite businesses, as we lose the dynamic and diverse pool of art students. And it's not just the arts that will lose the pool of talent. In all fields of potential graduate employment, the same will apply. 

Art Matters! It can communicate, inspire, motivate and educate. Visual art, in particular, has a dynamic power that enables anyone with access to a pencil and a sketchpad to express themselves in any way they desire. Art has helped me make sense of our complex world by giving me a language for my emotions that I may otherwise have struggled to put into words. Joy, sadness, rage — all can be expressed by the power of art. We need the arts in education to be open and accessible to all without the financial barriers of university fees and the burden of debt.

Comments welcome!

Thanks for reading.

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