Never mind that I haven't written anything since last summer. I started this blog as a way to document my quilting and knitting and hopefully get some feedback along the way. But I have to write something first. So here goes....
I recently took a class from a true quilt artist, Nancy Crow, titled Lines, Curves, Circles & Figure-Ground Composition. The class was intense, and I have to admit that I did not preform to my greatest potential. This was the 4th class I have taken so it was not that I didn't know what to expect. It just didn't seem to work out. A class with Nancy is hard work! 5 days of 8-10 hours of designing and sewing is really hard! She gives an assignment, and a time to complete it. There are usually detailed exercises which are to be assembled into a composition. And here is where I get stuck. It's hard, and probably takes practice, to walk into a room and turn on your creativity 100%. I just did not have the practice and experiences to do this effectively. But I did learn a lot and will redo my notes and probably try and redo the exercises.
But my greatest question is " What is good Composition?" I know about line, shape, curves, positive/negative space, warm/cool colors, color hue, tint and value. But what exactly is a good composition? What is a bad composition? and Why? My biggest criticism of a Nancy Crow class is that composition is never clearly demonstrated. Maybe this is the scientist in me, but at this point it is not intuitive, so I really need the "evidence" to understand the concepts. The classes are taught in a "student exploration" style and if you go down the wrong tunnel, you can get frustrated really fast. When I got home I spent a long time on the Internet searching for examples and there are really none. Just more on space, color, shape, etc. Maybe I can find a class at our local community college that will get me going down the "right tunnel".
Here are the pieces I worked on, and some of the class evaluation comments.
Exercise 1. Lines in black and white. . First my lines are too fat. They are supposed to be less than 3/4" . Composition eval - "Don't bother to finish". Not much excitement.
Exercise 2. Shapes - Bright colors on a pastel ground. The top left corner is not finished. Shapes just placed so they don't get lost. This got a good review and I was encouraged to finish it. Looks very rough in the picture, but I like it and I will definitely finish it.
Exercise 3. BIG and BOLD. Each of the circles are about 40" across. This composition challenge was to work BIG. At this point I was pretty tired. I just could not find the energy to come up with a good composition for all 4 circles. I had about 5 sketches in my notebook but none of them excited me enough to work on the entire piece. So I just did 2 of the ideas. I like the first one, but not sure how to integrate into the 4 circles. The second one was a "confetti" look. I like it as a single circle, but again not sure how to integrate into a large composition. I like this idea and will continue to collect ideas for the large work.
So still exploring the original question - What is good Composition?
3 comments:
I totally disagree about Exercise 1. I say play some more. There are interesting things going on. To me all your work has great potential. You just need to play some more! Hugs, Karen
Hola Irene:
Soy realmente una novata en esto del patchwork, pero mi humilde opinión es que una buena composición depende de quien la mira, el ejercicio 1 por ejemplo: puede que no hayas logrado el objetivo, pero a mí me parece hermoso.
un abrazo desde Chile!
www.manualidadespoly.blogspot.com
I agree with Karen. It may not be just about lines, but of all the pieces you show it is the one I find the most interesting. If you asked me I would say finish #1 and forget #2 - which for me lacks contrast and does not seem to have much idea as to where it is going. I suspect if you looked at it in grey scale it would have a lot of medium values in it.
Of the circles I like you first one with the curvy lines - could imagine that concept as having potential.
Thanks for sharing your feelings about your Nancy Crow workshop. Interesting to hear something other than glowing praise.
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