Welcome to The Working Artist Learning Site Forums Archive: Workshop your Artist Statement!

  • Mark Butler

    Member
    October 20, 2017 at 1:23 am

    First stab at an artist statement:

    Sculpting for me is re-discovering the art of play, but with heavier machinery and a lot of heat!

    My influences often have a scientific background, in the microscopic world and the amazing forms that can be found there and their unseen influence on our world, or the layering of mapping information onto a landscape. I aim to pass on this wonder of the unseen through my work.

    I have a fascination with the texture of decay and the mixing of different media. I love the surface of rusted steel, but combining it with the shiny coloured and textured surface of a bronze object bring both to life. After perfecting the art of bronze casting, I now try to introduce deliberate ‘failures’ into some of my work, embracing the unexpected and intriguing results these can produce.

    • Deleted User

      Deleted User
      October 23, 2017 at 5:08 am

      Hi Mark, your statement is great. I think the last paragraph is the strongest and most interesting, do you think maybe playing around with the structure a bit could form the second draft? Just to see what it would read like!

    • Mark Butler

      Member
      October 24, 2017 at 12:24 am

      <p class=”western”><span style=”font-family: Arial,sans-serif;”>Thanks Lily. This is my second attempt โ€“ do you think it’s better or worse?</span></p>
      <p class=”western”><span style=”font-family: Arial,sans-serif;”>I have a fascination with the texture of decay and the mixing of different media. I love the patina of rusted steel, but combining it with the shiny, coloured and textured surface of a bronze object bring both to life. After perfecting the art of bronze casting, I now try to introduce deliberate ‘failures’ into some of my work, embracing the unexpected and intriguing results these can produce.</span></p>
      <p class=”western”><span style=”font-family: Arial,sans-serif;”>My influences often have a scientific background, in the microscopic world and the amazing forms that can be found there and their unseen influence on our world, or the layering of mapping information onto a landscape. Taking these influences and forming them into a sculpture often happens in my mindโ€™s eye, or as the result of sketching ideas. Making these visions into physical works can often be a challenge, but it is one I relish, and it gives me great pleasure to finish a piece I have coaxed from a rough sketch into a finished sculpture. Sculpting for me is re-discovering the art of play, but with heavier machinery and a lot of heat!</span></p>

  • Helen Fraser

    Member
    October 20, 2017 at 4:51 am

    In the process of making a textile, the craftsperson applies their concentration in a meditative fashion, repeating patterns and actions over and over until the piece is complete. ย In my art making I use drawing as a meditation. ย It is the medium that gets me connected most quickly and deeply to my feelings. ย Immediate, it shows me where I am at, right away. ย It is honest. ย And by drawing textiles and observing them closely I am aiming to get to the heart of the work and it’s maker as a type of honouring of those who have gone before me.

    For the last twenty years I have worked as a Psychologist and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist in private practice in Prahran, Melbourne. ย This work is about using myself as a tool to facilitate the growth of another person’s mind, so they can think about their thoughts, feelings, desires, dreams, pain, longings and hopes. ย Slowly, session after session I see people’s guard come down which allows a mourning process to unfold, softening their spirit in the process. ย Being in the privileged position of witnessing the slow unfolding of another’s psyche deeply impacts on my own. ย The intensity and beauty as well as the exquisite sorrow of this work is a type of soul poetry which I am searching to express and honour in my drawings and textiles.

     

    • Deleted User

      Deleted User
      October 23, 2017 at 5:11 am

      Lovely statement Helen and really made me want to look at your work right away. I think the background really helps and is essential to an Artist’s statement.

    • Memet Burnett

      Member
      October 23, 2017 at 11:12 pm

      Wow. Very powerful.

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