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studio notes, fiber arts, and arts education
This week in Stitch and Surface we made a collaborative screenprint.
Here is an image of Philipp Runge's Color Spheres also c.1810. You have to imagine color as a globe. Each longitudinal section represents a hue or color family with all of the purest colors on the crust. Each latitudinal cross-section represents a step on a value scale, with white at the North Pole (think polar bears) and black at the South Pole (think penguins). A Slice across the equator would show the color wheel around the outer edge with colors becoming duller at the core. This is the view that illustrates Chroma! Any slice across a hemisphere will show how opposite colors mix together and become grey. They cancel each other out and lose chroma.
Our piece consists of a wooden armature encrusted with 3-dimensional mylar "nodes". The drawings on the mylar in sharpie and acrylic grew out of a 2-week map-making exercise. The finished piece feels like an explosion of all our paths and emotions and experiences during the time we worked together. It is unlike anything the 4 of us would normally have made and yet it still contains a spark of each of our personalities and art practices.
It hangs and twists in the drafty rafters, every glance a different perspective.