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The Brighter Day: Happy New Year from Iskra Fine Art

January 10, 2018 by Iskra Leave a Comment

The Brighter Day Iskra Print

 

“Parallels are not what we think. They do not really exist except in a mathematical sense and except as an idea to play off. If it is difficult for anything in the real world to move in a true straight line, think of the impossibility of two things moving together in two parallel straight lines.

In the human imagination a parallel world is not a world that replicates the one in which we live or that is its exact opposite but one that turns and flows through many other possibilities and dimensionalities; all the while keeping company and somehow referencing the one it shadows.”—From Consolations, by David Whyte

Welcome to the new year! I am looking forward to light on the horizon in 2018. As I look back on 2017, it was not without its provocations, but in spite of geologic, political and human disasters my work kept going and expanding in new and unexpected ways. When I first began trying to find my own voice after decades in design it often felt like something too hard to do. It was easier to drink a third cup of coffee and stare into space than actually attempt to make the vision in my mind’s eye. Now I am happy to say I find it impossible to stop working. Of course there are always things I would prefer to avoid, (oh, god. varnishing!) (gluing paper!) (archiving prints), but the strategy of always doing something else that I don’t want to do less while avoiding the Big Things seems to pay off, as eventually there is nothing left to do but the bigger thing, and that ends up becoming a show. Speaking of which:

 

Save the date for

Industrial Pastorale

A solo show of imagery exploring the liminal edge between rural and urban landscape

at Perry & Carlson in Mt. Vernon, Washington

Opening: Saturday March 3rd 3-6

(timed so you can catch the shows in sister art mecca Edison too!)

 

I am working in the studio every day to complete this new series of work after which I will catch my breath for a second and then begin developing ideas for “The Harbor” my solo show at Taste at SAM in August. In between studio marathons I am back to reading poetry books and essays, and diving deep into the connection between words and images, story and composition. Thank you for David Whyte, Ali Smith and Annie Dillard, who are my newest bedtime companions. I could happily dream with those three for the next year, with maybe Virginia Woolf and Charles Dickens thrown in for good measure:

“There is a kind of sleep that steals upon us sometimes, which, while it holds the body prisoner, does not free the mind from a sense of things about it, and enable it to ramble at its pleasure. So far as an overpowering heaviness, a prostration of strength, and an utter inability to control our thoughts or power of motion, can be called sleep, this is it; and yet we have a consciousness of all that is going on about us; and if we dream at such a time, words which are really spoken, or sounds which really exist at the moment, accommodate themselves with surprising readiness to our visions, until reality and imagination become so strangely blended that it is afterwards almost a matter of impossibilty to separate the two. —From Oliver Twist

That place. Where this came from:

Liminal Shift Print of a Bridge by IskraLiminal Shift (Division Street), limited edition archival pigment print, available here.

Thanks for reading, and have patience while I try to finish my long-promised next article, Instagram for Artists. Lots of research. Lots of coffee, Please sir, I want some more. . . .

Filed Under: Iskra Shows, Upcoming and Past, Prints, Recent Posts Tagged With: artists and books, David Whyte, iskra upcoming shows, Oliver Twist, Perry and Carlson, Skagit Art Scene, what I'm reading

New Landscapes | Memories of the Farm

November 5, 2017 by Iskra Leave a Comment

Pastorale No. 1 | The Copse, archival pigment limited edition print © Iskra Johnson

At about 5 in the afternoon you sit on the fence and rock your legs against the barn wood and pick splinters out of your knees in between watching the light that angles across the fields. The wind ripples and makes three shades of green light and you sing America the Beautiful without even knowing it is corny. You are nine years old or maybe 10, and braid your hair with horse ribbons. The word ribbon becomes part of your intimate knowing of the world: mane, braid, field, wind….

I have been away for awhile roaming the landscape of the Skagit to create a new series for an upcoming solo show at Perry and Carlson in March. The new work, which I am calling “Industrial Pastorale,” is a very personal evolution of imagery that explores the liminal edge between rural and urban landscape. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Architecture & Sense of Place, Digital Collage, Prints, Road Trips Tagged With: Andrew Wyeth, barn art, iskra upcoming shows, mixed media prints, pastoral art, rustic art, skagit valley, Wallace Stevens

Summer Print Sale!

July 27, 2017 by Iskra Leave a Comment

The Crimson Monarch print by Iskra“The Crimson Monarch,” 15.5 x 15.5 ” 1/20, available during the Summer Print Sale

I have been super busy this summer finishing the body of work for Industrial Strength, a three-woman show opening at SAM Gallery on Wednesday September 13th. Something about wrapping up a set of work and being “done” just seems to lead to more ideas. I keep coming back to The Floating World as a source of inspiration, and each time I find something new. Sometimes all I see is the sky and the water, and sometimes I see the shore, the anchor and the fine tethers that keep one from floating away. The great ship the Crimson Monarch was moored beneath the Elliott Bay grain elevators a few months ago. By May it had rained for eight months and on the first sunny Sunday of the year I could not wait to get out to the waterfront with my camera. I fell madly in love with this ship and the way it faced the sun, owning the bay. I use real names in my ship portraits. If you want to kick back with a beverage that puts you in a nautical frame of mind and a pair of binoculars, you can follow the Crimson Monarch on shipspotting.com. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Artist Studio Visits, Iskra Shows, Upcoming and Past, Press, Print Sale, Prints Tagged With: artist process, Ben Calhoun, Chittendon locks, Crimson Monarch, industrial art, nautical, Northwest artist, print sale, uncommon union, water prints

Paths to Intuition in Digital Printmaking

June 13, 2017 by Iskra 1 Comment

 

intuitive composition Iskra Fine Art
Morning pages digital composition practice

The big puzzle in my studio life right now is how to maintain access to intuition while working in the highly technological medium of digital print making. As someone coming from traditional printmaking, and particularly monoprint, I prize the excitement of accidents and transformations not entirely in my control. And the things I look at obsessively, like the sides of dumpsters and the backs of stop signs, are surfaces of completely unintentional beauty. To get this feeling of things — to get the reality, more importantly — it’s essential to embed in the workflow some wild cards. The images I have been doing recently are taking radical new turns, and it’s because I have been taking risks and learning how to embrace chaos.

What is Digital Printmaking?

First, for those reading who may think of digital printmaking as simply scanning a painting and printing it from a computer, or using a mouse or stylus to draw, a brief explanation. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Prints Tagged With: digital intuition, digital printmaking, industrial art, modern printmaking, new work from Iskra, the creative process

New Work in Black and White

April 27, 2017 by Iskra 1 Comment

“It is very easy, red is red and blue is blue.” – The Color Kittens

“A red apple is a good example of subtractive color; the apple really has no color; it has no light energy of its own, it merely reflects the wavelengths of white light that cause us to see red and absorbs most of the other wavelengths which evokes the sensation of red. The viewer (or detector) can be the human eye, film in a camera or a light-sensing instrument.”—RGB World

The Beach Mixed Media Iskra

Periodically I find it useful to step back from color and limit choice. Someone almost as famous as the Color Kittens once said, “Color is hard.” Color can be a lot of information, extra data not always necessary for telling a particular kind of story. Subtracting color can, as they put it on those reading comp tests from the third grade, help you choose “which sentence describes what this story is about.”

The story right now is about memory. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Photography, Prints, Recent Posts, Travel Tagged With: Akumal, black and white, Mexico, The World is Young, tropics, Tulum, Wayne Miller

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