Archive for J. D. Hastings

Sub-Quilts

Posted in Art, Collage, craft, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , on October 25, 2011 by jdhastings

Lately I’ve been trying to do more of the types of quilts I started the year working on, but I’ve been having issues with color schemes. I have Piles of canvases lining my dropcloth divided into rough colors (Green, Blue, Yellow, Orange, Neutral) that are supposed to help me with this, but this actually just tends to limit me to a single hue. When I try to start combining the colors together, the combinations start getting too complicated to control.

Green

Color schemes like this work well, but are harder to herd than you might expect. Complements make each other brighter, so the pieces you thought was underplayed prior to adding it suddenly become stark when sewn together. At that point the rest of the quilt becomes a series of reactions trying to wrangle the color scheme back from noise. If you become too conservative, though, the colors wash out into uniformity. This can be good at times when you want to emphasize the pattern of a quilt, but in chaotic patchwork of a hundred tiny pieces, you lose your focal point.

My response has been to work in more uniform fields, which I can then combine in larger, easier to control forms later. That’s what these are. I need to finish another color or more and then will make 3-5 pieces out of them, with overall shapes defining them. They will each end up 28″ square, but I need to add 4 inches to the green one.

-JD

From the Archives: I Don’t Have A Name For This

Posted in Art, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , on October 18, 2011 by jdhastings

Whoever is in charge of setting up my scanner should really get on that. And buy me a new printer. This is getting annoying.

I’m not sure I’ve posted this before. This was originally created as a wedding gift for a close friend. Because of it’s dimensions, I’ll post a smaller version with a some bigger versions of 2 of the components after the jump for anybody looking for details.

fullWEB

Each part of the triptych is 10″ x 10″. While I didn’t really try anything radically new in these, it’s still one of my favorite pieces in terms of color relationships that I’ve made.

Read more »

Winter Approaches

Posted in Art, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , on October 4, 2011 by jdhastings

Yesterday was the first real rainy day of the season out here in California. We only have 2 real seasons here, so this more or less marks the beginning of Winter. With it I found myself looking under my bed for something. While there I found this scrap of an old drop cloth, squirreled away like an acorn.

These are always hard to display because of their dimension, so I’ll post one small that will fit in your browser and one larger so you see more of the details.

6209430523_6c506ca79a_o
40″ x 9″, Acrylic on Canvas

Larger after the jump Read more »

Tribute to Jazz Label Art (and Miles)

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting, Photography with tags , , , , , , , , , on September 27, 2011 by jdhastings

This is a piece I made using leftover parts for another portrait of Miles I made that is being used as part of a longer term piece. My vague intent with this was to convey the sense of an album cover from the early to mid 1950s.

DSC_1039 copy

It doesn’t imitate any exact label, but personally I’d place it somewhere in the Prestige or Columbia spectrum. Next to these examples, I’m afraid the piece doesn’t hold up as well as I’d like, but it got me studying it, so I’m happy.

Anyways, having done this research (after the fact), I thought I’d offer an informal guide to Jazz Album Art style across different labels. The site http://www.birkajazz.com/archive is absolutely invaluable in this, and I recommend studying their extensive collections by label.

_________________________________________

Blue Note

When people think of jazz album art they immediately think of Blue Note Records, and for good reason. Designer Reid Miles and photographer Francis Wolff gave them a consistency of style and voice that allowed the full label’s stable of artists to present a unified visual identity.


This piece is representative of the early Blue Note style, which often fits the mold of photos fit into random shapes with text randomly arrayed aligned it.


This image kind of fits the same vein, but the parts are all simplified, and the sense of design is more confident all around, leading to a period when the photograph would be allowed to dominate the proceedings more freely.


This is the quintessential Blue Note cover from this early period. An expressive photograph is given the majority of the space, with an overlay of blue used to flatten it somewhat while the title shouts itself from the perimeter in a stand-out white that boxes the photograph in. It’s perfectly simple and yet also perfectly manipulated.


An early typography experiment that points towards the future.


An example of the line drawing you will find on some albums, in this case, if you can read the signature it belongs to a young Andy Warhol.

I’ll continue this at length after the jump. Read more »

Rhombicuboctahedrons For Mental Health

Posted in Art, Drawing, J. D. Hastings with tags , , , , on September 20, 2011 by jdhastings

Last week I was having energy and anxiety issue. Finally, one day at work, I forced myself to draw this:

As I said then on tumblr, “When the world seems particularly stupid I get an obsessive urge to make perspective drawings to assure myself order still exists, even if it’s just the illusion of such.”

Since then, my computer has refused to acknowledge my printer/scanner combo, my cable television cut out and as of this morning, my building’s water didn’t work. Possibly due to a crackhead stealing it’s pipes. Clearly, a fancy cube wasn’t going to cut it. Thus I present you, the “rhombicuboctahedron,” a term I had to look up on google this morning. I had been calling it a 3D octagon, but will now pretend I knew it’s real name all along.

Octagon3

(I apologize for the appearance of these photos. Due to my scanner being out I used my camera and apparently messed up the entire enterprise.) This version was inked with drafting pen on vellum (the vellum I’m using is basically high quality tracing paper). This allows me to preserve states of the original so I can go different directions later if I choose.

Octagon4

This is an earlier state of the same drawing showing the completely transparent rhombicuboctahedron. It may take a while to understand it as such, but I assure you it’s true.

The next 2 drawings are blurry. I apologize, but they help give context to the above 2 drawings.
Read more »

More Eruptions

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings with tags , , on September 6, 2011 by jdhastings

These are the remaining Volcanos I made last month. They probably aren’t as good as the originals, and I forgot to scan 2 of them better ones cutting them up again, but such is life.

volcano 001

volcano 003

volcano 007

volcano 005

More below the jump.
Read more »

Franken-Lichtenstein

Posted in Art, Collage, Drawing, Painting with tags , , , on August 30, 2011 by jdhastings

In this series, like all of my recent collages, I’m experimenting with issues of context and representation. The subject of any art piece brings it’s own context and background to that piece’s interpretation. Andy Warhol’s portrait of Mao Tse Tung is highly informed by the charged identity of it’s subject matter. His Marilyn Monroe portraits are created in a very similar style, yet produce an extremely different effect because of the huge difference between the perception of her and Mao. The viewer can’t help but bring their pre-knowledge of either to their viewing.

BLAM 013

At the same time, however, how the works are made is also charged with context. Those same Warhol screen prints were as notable for the quick form of reproduction used, and what that said about modes of production and the consumer object. Taken together these formalist qualities interact with the qualities of the subject matter to create the general identity of the piece. (Over time, the Warhols have also gained context specific to themselves, their own history and existing within the public consciousness in their own right.)

Every aspect of an art piece (or possibly anything) has a level of context that informs it’s interpretation by a viewer.

BLAM 012

My recent series of collages (and works based upon them) is an attempt to exaggerate that relationship to the breaking point. Each piece is representational, yet represents their subjects with other materials loaded contexts that compete with the represented. Whether appropriated printed materials or other artworks that I’ve made, each layer of each stencil can be isolated and interpreted in it’s own right. The overall effect of the added noise of the competing materials is to drown out much of the effect of the represented subject.

BLAM 011

In the case of J Dilla and now this series that transforms this piece by Roy Lichtenstein, the subject matter is self-reflective: Lichtenstein and Dilla both specialized in the re-contextualization of prior works of art. The context they bring to these pieces is intended to reflect on these pieces themselves. How I reference the subjects with the source material is meant to be fluid, ranging from complementary to a feedback loop of pure noise (a plane wreck, if you will?..).

BLAM 010

The source material in these varies from completely arbitrary (Sample voting ballot in the second piece down), to referencing the subject matter itself (the purple and blue dots in the 8th piece down), to ironic absurdity (the childrens’ illustration of the 7th down), to imposed relationships between different abstract patterns (patterns themselves being an intricate series of relationships between parts- 4th and 5th piece down). I’ve appropriated art publications, other artforms (music, quilting, literature), or non-art-forms (science publications) and even art making materials (used masking tape, cover of a watercolor pad in the 2nd down). I even appropriate the drawings of my own computer.

BLAM 009

The point of this is that every component of each version of each image can be related back to the facts of the creation of the piece itself, to it’s subject matter, or to the intellectual history of that subject matter, or even to me, my personal history and the constant influx of information flung at me by society (the paper Trader Joe’s bag in the 3rd down didn’t need to be branded and populated with folksy ephemera, yet they felt obligated to impose themselves into my mental space, which ultimately can’t help but influence my interaction with the rest of the world in whatever minor way). The inclusion of each component is intended to make this web of relationships explicit- to force it to the surface as much as possible instead of allowing our brains to simplify it into a sensible silence, as they usually do.

BLAM 008

Finally, all this explanation is meant to explain the pieces I posted a few weeks back, the “Irony” series.

BLAM 007

“A does not equal A” is the literal definition of a logical contradiction. It is also arguably the modern definition of irony. When something is used figuratively to represent something other than itself, that contradiction is a form of irony. These series of collages, by focusing on the web of context everything in the universe exists within implicitly challenge the ability of anything to existence outside of context, which is usually how things are defined. Change the context in which something is presented and you change that thing itself. These images are not “about” a plane exploding. They are about being images, and specifically to the difficulties of images fulfilling the roles they are meant to fulfill.

BLAM 006

The difficulty of understanding “things,” defined outside of context, can lead to intrinsic logical fallacies, yet our minds aren’t equipped to cope with the concept of A not equaling A. I definitely don’t want a structural engineer to start deconstructing his own work product to better examine the historical context in which he works. But in my recent work I am trying to find a new form of logic- or illogic- that can analyze the world with less focus on cleanly defined “things” to focus more on the relationships between those things.

BLAM 005

The reason I want to do THAT, however, is a whole ‘nother story.

-JD

John Henry Died With A Hammer In His Hands

Posted in Art, Drawing, J. D. Hastings with tags , , , on August 23, 2011 by jdhastings

I remember reading the John Henry legend in second grade. It stuck with me because it was so weird. Why was anyone that proud of hammering? Does the fact that he won the race signify that no machine can conquer the human spirit or the fact that he died signify that an inconcquerable spirit is a long term negative?

I don’t know, and at this point in human development it’s probably irrelevant as we either won or lost that battle a long time ago. In most disciplines. Some artists still have opinions on photography, let alone digital art. Honestly, they already have computers composing music so if this is a source of anxiety for you, you’ll want to stock up on Ativan now.

In that thread, and relating to last week’s post about the need to stock up materials for future projects, I give you art drawn by my computer:

Source136

My Pazzles cutting machines are able to make things like this if you replace the cutting blade with a pen. The trick for me is then to design the patterns for them to draw using bezier lines.

Source130

The piece above shows the primary limitation of this method. While it’s pretty straightforward to tell a human “Use a flat tipped market to collor the shapes in” anything translating a digital command to a physical action by a computer is much more complicated (anyone who’s ever cussed out a printer understands). The machine only understands lines. Even if it could hold the flat tipped marker, it would still have to be programmed exactly how to move it in linear fashion.

Source133

The result is that if you want a block of color you have to teach the machine to block them in with a large number of lines. The piece at the top does that using all straight lines. Directionality of the lines distinguishes the different zones.

Source134

This piece (also included last week) has 9 different “fill” textures. Tiny wavy lines, circles, regular lines and a variety of those things cross hatched together. It probably could never be drawn by me at the level of precision the machine could get, but it now takes the machine less time to draw than it took me to put together online.

Source131

It’s not perfect though. The machine has a weird tendency to forget to pick up the pen between shapes, which leads to some of the random lines across the page in some of these. This is weird to me because of all the problems I attribute with computers, absent mindedness isn’t one of them. Regardless, I’ll take it in return for the advantages.

Source129

I drew this one by hand. It probably took longer than any of these and, while it has block color, still is kind of clumsy. Oh well.

In addition to these patterns I developed, you can also just plug a photo in and as the computer to interpret everything itself with interesting results. Here’s my computer’s drawing of a cat:

cat316

More samples after the jump: Read more »

Paving the Road To Nowhere

Posted in abstract, Collage, Painting with tags , , on August 16, 2011 by jdhastings

Accomplishing things always feels good.

At the end of a project like last week’s I feel good and productive. That feeling may lead me to want to finish something else quickly to keep that feeling going.

The rush to have something finished is unproductive in its own way, though. I see some artists who get so focused on having something new to show that they never slow down to produce something that might maximize their talents.

Purple183

The way I work, this is a particular issue. My raw materials are pre-made things. Without them I can’t finish anything. In addition to that I’ve found that trying to predict the materials I’ll need for a final piece (and therefore working from step 1 to the finish in linear fashion) never works out. I need options. Messes like this happen because I can’t imagine the perfect piece to solve a puzzle before I see it and have to try out 50 before making up my mind (if then).

Source149

The result is that sometimes I have to commit myself to going nowhere. I have to decide to make things for which the end goal is hazy, if it exists at all, just to have something to file in the back of a cabinet somewhere to be found 2 years later.

Source144

Sometimes I have to make things to go into the things I make to go into things I make to go into the final piece. I don’t know how many times these things will be processed, which will get accidentally destroyed, which will surprisingly “make” a piece, and which will be thrown out because they just didn’t work in the context I tried to use them in.

Purple186

This weekend, I consciously put aside the idea of continuing to work on stuff I might finish quickly because the last project depleted my stocks and I needed more fodder. Some of the designs I started using in the last month worked and I could see them being useful for quilts I won’t even start until next year or beyond. That’s what these are (not all of them are from this weekend, but all are pieces I made in the hopes they’d help something else).

Source142

I do NOT mean this as some sort of “the journey is a reward unto itself” cliche. Taking these breaks where nothing final gets produced annoys the living hell out of me. Not knowing where I’m headed with these makes me feel adrift. The point is that conceiving and pursuing a single, unified goal assumes a level of control I don’t think it’s natural to have. Some people can accomplish great feats by that method, but more often my experience is that those who pursue such things limit their own conception. Entropy is the guiding force of the universe, and working against it only creates heat.

Purple192

My alternative is to embrace chance. Instead of trying to limit it, I try to work within it’s confines. I don’t know what I’ll need when I need it. I may not even recognize what’s going to work right up until after a project is done. Taking weeks or months to produce a wide range of “useless” crap increases the odds that what I need is where I need it when I stumble upon it on the route to a more certain end point. Taking risks and being willing to fail allows for probability, entropy, may ultimately work in my favor.

Source133

Ultimately, seeing those chances bear fruit is the most rewarding part of this practice to me. It’s what makes the finished product so rewarding and it’s why I put up with these half-finished, unpolished pains in the asses.

Source143

Source138

The Definition of Irony

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , , , , , on August 9, 2011 by jdhastings

In the past weeks when I mentioned I was making collages as materials to use in other collages, these are those other collages. Ironically, of the 5 collages used in these, only 2 have been shown on d’Arteboard. All of these are 8.5″ x 11″, mixed media.

Irony162

Along with the collages, there are also quilts and sewn paintings among the materials that went into these. Those that contain no representation but the formula “A ≠ A” are presented in landscape, while any piece set into a collage with portrait alignment was kept that way so that the intrusion would be more apparent. If it’s still not apparent, though, I’m fine with that.

Irony159

Irony164

Irony158

Now would be a good time to post an artist’s statement for these, but I’m afraid I haven’t written it yet. I may try to write it once I’m better caffeinated, though. I’ll post an update at the top if I do. After the jump, 7 more.

Read more »

Thanks, Flickr

Posted in Art, Drawing, J. D. Hastings with tags , , on August 2, 2011 by jdhastings

I uploaded images last night and now that I’m at work, they aren’t there. Fantastic.

Instead of what I had planned I guess I’ll post these drawings I did of a painting I also don’t have a photo of here. Maybe you can guess what it looks like.

CirclesArcs

CirclesArcsColor1

Circle024

RedOrange060

I drew these a few years ago when my camera was broken so I couldn’t get real critiques on art online. In response I started to draw the paintings I was making in MS Paint and posting those. The people online got hilariously angry at me for trying this so even after I got a new camera I kept posting things like this instead of the photos. These drawings are of a masking tape paint collage that, as I said, I still haven’t gotten around to photographing.

Now if you pardon me I’m going to swear at my computer some more.

-JD

Yet More Dillas

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings with tags , , , on July 26, 2011 by jdhastings

I told you I had 9 more of these.

I still plan to crank out more editions of different prints but fell behind this week even as I make it harder for myself by making more complicated source materials to go into these… which are still intended to be source material for another project I should be working on. Anyways, I’m wearing down a bit. Fortunately I had these ready to go.

All are mixed media, 11″ x 8.5″

Dillas115

Dillas118

Dillas113

These are basically made with leftover parts from the last batch. In those, I cut out the shape of each layer below it. These are the shapes that were cut out. The only added element in these is the background I mounted them on. As with any batch made in volume some of these are much better than others.

Dillas115

Dillas118

Dillas113

Dillas120

5 More after the jump Read more »

Ring of Fire

Posted in Art, art on paper, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , on July 19, 2011 by jdhastings

I guess these aren’t special anymore.

I spent the weekend making 18 new Volcano collages as source material for the same project I made last week’s J Dilla collages (in addition to the 9 in this post, 9 more were drying as I was prepping these for posting).

Volcanos107 Volcanos108 Volcanos104

In general these were more problematic than the Dillas. I used more elements that had already been collaged in these (see the concentric circles, wavy lines and Q-Bert squares in some of the pieces). Additionally, the design itself is a lot more detailed than the Dillas. Thicker materials plus more detailed cuts mean more headaches with the cutting machines. I had to throw out 1/4 to 1/3 of the materials I tried to cut. That doesn’t matter much when it’s a sheet of newspaper, but is a real pain in the ass when you have to throw out a collage that took a few hours in itself to create.

The results are generally worse than last week. I think 2 of these came out well, The rest range from serviceable with reservations to kind of terrible. Strangely, the 9 I prepped yesterday seem more successful despite being made of the spare parts from this. Anyways, I got the 1 or 2 that I’ll need for the larger project.

Volcanos107

Volcanos108

Volcanos104

Volcanos109

The other 5 are below the jump Read more »

Grippa Dillas

Posted in Art, art on paper, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , on July 12, 2011 by jdhastings

I made 9 of these simple J Dilla Collages this weekend to help with another project. I made so many in order to ensure that I got 2 that met my needs. I got that, so now I’ll find a way to group the rest and either sell them or give them away. I actually have another 8 drying right now (a byproduct of making these actually). I’m going to be spitting out a lot of different collages like this the next few weeks.

First, a group of 4:

4Dillas
Each Dilla is about 10 x 7. Multimedia.

Close Ups:
JDilla069

JDilla068

JDilla070

JDilla072

These are the best 4 to me, hence including them in a set. After the jump I’ll include the other 4, including the 2 I’ll be using in the future product. I didn’t use the best ones for that product because they’re going to be cut up further so there’s not as much reason to.

Read more »

16 Dualities

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , on July 5, 2011 by jdhastings

This may be the biggest and most substantial single project I’ve ever taken on for myself.

16 Dualities

“16 Dualities” 40″ x 40″ acrylic and multi-media on canvas with safety pins.

Each of the component pieces of this work are miniature versions of this work, which itself was one of the most challenging pieces I’d taken on.

The challenge is, if you look at each piece’s 2 colors one at a time, you hopefully notice that they each have their own hole in them, and that the 2 holes link with each other. This is accomplished by weaving 2 entirely autonomous pieces that cross over each other.

Unfortunately, this was the piece where I learned the benefits of using lighter wood for the frames if I’m going to attach them all. The entire piece weighs so much I’ve never even attempted to hang it and may choose to display them separately, if the occasion arises.

After the jump I’ll post a close up of one of the pieces and some of the alternative patterns I was thinking of aranging these in. It turns out that exercise is similar to some of the considerations you have in regular quilting.

Read more »

Dune Collage

Posted in Art, Collage, J. D. Hastings with tags , , , on June 21, 2011 by jdhastings

I posted the rough sketch that became this last week.

Here’s the result, now collaged with a mix of paint, fabric and print media. This is 1 of 16 tiles for a large piece I’m making for a friend (hence the curved edges where it’ll be joined to another tile). It’s 12: x 8″ more or less.

Dune

In it’s current state it’s a lot harder to read what’s going on. The worm head stands out, but the body doesn’t. The dust clouds fade into each other. On the other hand, it’s still kind of pretty, and I don’t entirely mind that the represented object isn’t totally clear. It’s something the viewer can work on if they want to.

I still reserve the right to make changes if I feel like it, but I’m satisfied for now.

-JD

I’m a Grumbly Jerk Today

Posted in Art, Drawing with tags , , on June 14, 2011 by jdhastings

I’m in a bad mood. I didn’t sleep well and when I finally did fall asleep I dreamt about not being able to fall asleep. Then I’m out of tea, my computer is running slow and AN ENTIRE SCHOOL OF CHILDREN was in my way as I tried to exit the BART station to get to work.

Also, I apparently forgot to upload my image for today up to Flickr and I stupidly left open an opportunity to play an X in 2 directions on a triple letter score on Words with Friends. I am a bottle of pure distilled rage this morning and hate everything.

Here’s a quick drawing of the worm from Dune that I made into a collage I can’t post. The little figures suck. I get it.

 Dune047

-JD

Clockwise

Posted in Art, Collage, Drawing, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , , , on June 7, 2011 by jdhastings

I was laid up this weekend with a twisted ankle so decided to make a quick book for this.

In a hurry, I went to my standby, the target, with a line through it that rotated clockwise over the course of 6 pages. I hadn’t made a book comprised of actual premade quilts before, so this was a nice exercise. The whole thing is about 8″ x 8″ I think. Maybe 7″. It’s made of Acrylic on Canvas, drawings and pre-printed collage materials sewn together.

Here’s the progression:

1 2 3
4 5 6

I’ll post larger images after the jump.

Here’s the covers. I had to take these while at work.:
IMG_0556
Front Cover

IMG_0558
Back Cover

IMG_0559
Ready to ship. In theory. In practice I had to buy a huge sticker that covered up my handwriting and got smudged and may not have fit right.

So there’s a healthy chance this never ends up anywhere.

Bigger images of the inside after the jump.
Read more »

More Graph Paper Designs

Posted in Art, Drawing, J. D. Hastings with tags , , , , , on May 31, 2011 by jdhastings

If I didn’t have to work for a living I’d get a lot more art done. And read more books. In fact the world as a whole would be a better place.

I came tantalizing close to finishing something to post this weekend but got caught by the buzzer. Instead, here are some designs I scribbled while teaching myself some of the art of tessellation.

tiles235

tiles237

There’s more after the jump. Read more »

Message Art

Posted in Art, J. D. Hastings, Painting with tags , , , , on April 26, 2011 by jdhastings

I spent the weekend unmasking several drop cloths I’ve been working on simultaneously, so you my be seeing a theme from me the next few weeks while I take on a bigger project.

This was started around August of last year. It’s both subtle and not.

Give Up 1

“Tip For Artists” After John Baldessari and William Powhida. 27″ x 30″ Acrylic on Canvas.

On the process, I painted many other paintings on this sheet, using stencils to get the design. The result is determined by what I’m painting for other projects at the time, and the surface is often hidden from me as I work on it (for months), so I’m never sure how it’ll turn out before unmasking it. While it looks somewhat expressionist, it’s kind of something else- part of an overall system where decisions about other things end up determining this (except for the stencilled design, obviously).

Detail shot after the jump: Read more »

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