Recently, I made the switch from using posterboard as the support for my collages to using stretched canvas. I had liked the posterboard (yes like from your seventh grade science project) because it was so lightweight that it made transportation easy, but unfortunately with all that moving around I learned the downside to posterboards portability was its fragility. With the ravages of time and travel all of my collages bent and buckled and broke. Canvas is much more durable, and it offered me a new, unconquered, territory for collage: the sides.
While collaging on posterboard, I would not extend the images onto the rough, raw, edges of the poster board, but with a stretched canvas the sides are finished, and thus a fresh pasture to frolic in. Instead of stopping at the edges my images have slopped right over the sides, overflowing down the flanks of the canvas- a coordinated frame:
(Click to Enlarge)While collaging on posterboard, I would not extend the images onto the rough, raw, edges of the poster board, but with a stretched canvas the sides are finished, and thus a fresh pasture to frolic in. Instead of stopping at the edges my images have slopped right over the sides, overflowing down the flanks of the canvas- a coordinated frame:
Side detail of "Pottery & Peaches" (August 2009).
All of the pieces that are currently at Wave Gallery in Newport, RI also feature the "right off the edge" look.
On another note I've been thinking about selling editions of my collages (as well as the originals). So if you are interested in making a purchase please e-mail me at Ashleye23@gmail.com , put the name of the piece that you are interested in in the subject line and I will send you all the pricing information.
Thanks for reading!
On another note I've been thinking about selling editions of my collages (as well as the originals). So if you are interested in making a purchase please e-mail me at Ashleye23@gmail.com , put the name of the piece that you are interested in in the subject line and I will send you all the pricing information.
Thanks for reading!
Ashley, Your work is wonderful! I especially love the vibrance of the colors in the Newport-inspired pieces. I look forward to seeing more as you add to your site!
ReplyDeleteBev Hanly