The Kick-About #81 ‘Tannenwald’


Charles Sheeler, our prompt for our previous Kick-About, transformed his man-made landscapes into flattened, graphical patchworks. Klimt’s painting, Tannenwald is similarly transformative, magicking a forest of ubiquitous pine trees into something as tactile and richly textured as tapestry and is this week’s muse. Happy browsing – and you’ll find all previous editions of The Kick-About here.


Vanessa Clegg

“This began as a photo I was given a while ago, so, after ripping it up and reassembling, it reminded me of those infuriating ball games where you have to get all the balls into all of the minuscule dips… Then, looking at Klimt’s painting, the fragmented style of tiny brush marks drew me towards the cake decorations: hundreds and thousands so… with a Pritt Stick and sprinkles, I attempted to reconstruct (or is that deconstruct?) the artwork. Not altogether successful, but a good session of ‘playtime’, and, if cakes are ever baked in this kitchen, I’ll be prepared!”


vanessaclegg.co.uk


Phil Cooper

“I love Klimt’s landscape paintings more than his super-famous images with figures (that fetch a lot more money at auction but give me one of the landscapes any day). His sense of colour and the mysterious beauty with which he imbues the trees and flowers is rather magical. 

Berlin is surrounded by forests. There are some particularly fine old beech forests about a couple of hours north of the city. But for my response this week I’ve gone small scale and made images of a nest made of twigs I found on my balcony. I noticed a wood pigeon flitting about on the balcony the other day and when I went to trim the broom that had finished flowering, I found a nest. Unfortunately, the pigeons took fright at my bobbing about so much and they abandoned the nest. I photographed it and played around with the photos. I’d like to move on a step from the photos to draw from them, something on big sheets of paper with charcoal. It wasn’t a very elaborate nest – pigeons really are pretty lazy at this, a few twigs plonked on a surface, and they’re done – but I liked the idea that these twigs would create a protective space for the eggs to be laid and the new chicks to hatch. The twigs will then get blown away and rot down into the earth to feed the trees that make more twigs for more nests, on and on…”


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Francesca Maxwell

“Fabulous painting by Klimt, just the kind of world I see and paint. He uses the dotted, fragmented brushstrokes to create the light and texture with beautiful contrasting colours. I tend to use lines to create a similar effect and I like to play and explore the incorporeity of objects and their interaction with the background. Here is my version of a pathway in the woods.” Acrylic ink on watercolour paper, 76×56 cm.


www.FBM.me.uk


Jan Blake

“The first question I asked myself was ‘what is the difference between a forest and a wood’, as the Klimt painting suggests tall forests of straight, giant pine forests glowing in dappled Autumn light. The answer was we have fewer and smaller areas that can support species such as heaths, open grassland and farmland, of which forests are part. The term woodlands is considered to be land covered with trees and vegetation, but in the UK tend not to be as large as forests elsewhere in Europe. Most of the pine forests are in Scotland and they still have game to hunt there. The pencil drawing I have made is my view of a ‘plantation’ of new trees of the same species on the Burton Agnes estate in Yorkshire. I think they are ash trees and the repetitive nature of their arching limbs and the grasses between them, as if at sea, captured my love of movement, a complete contrast to the stillness of the Klimt. However, I couldn’t help sharing this photo of a new woodland I helped to plant and nurture that relates more to the Klimt painting. When it matures, the mixture of species will give a completely different aspect of tangled branches and non-uniform shapes.”


janblake.co.uk


Charly Skilling

“I was thinking about Klimt’s ‘Tannenwald’ whilst playing with some oil pastels and ended up with a sketch that was recognisably “woody” but offered little in the way of texture. However, it did suggest a possible means of using yarns of differing weights and ply to build the textures (and colours) that I sought. The different tensions within the fabric, created by using different yarns, caused the shapes to twist and contort, producing trees more reminiscent of ancient woodlands and fairy tales than Klimt’s pines. It felt more like ‘tree-wrangling’ at times than crochet, but I learn new stuff with every Kick-About. ” 



Kerfe Roig

“One thing that struck me about all the reproductions of this painting is the wide variation of color.  I’m sure none are ‘true’ to the actual work. I wanted to do some embroidery, but got little done. I think the concept was valid, the execution not so much.  I’m not sure where it will go next. I may pull some of the ground stitches out to begin with. Just part of the creative process: it happens often to me, anyway, roads that end up going nowhere. But you always learn something.”


always un
finished, the hand’s work
wandering
through mind’s eye–
branching off, elusive, en
igmatic as time


kblog.blog / methodtwomadness.wordpress.com


Phil Gomm

“So not a pine forest, but a beech wood carpeted with bluebells. These photographs were produced by over-exposing a lot to introduce lots of white into the image and blow out the details to produce as impressionist a vibe as possible. The leaves on the trees themselves were innately pointillist because they were small, trembling and translucent and the bluebells themselves didn’t seem credible at all – all that consistent colour, and so much of it. The moodier images were over-exposed to push the highlights of the leaves, which appeared to float like shoals of neon fish in the darker bits of the wood, and then the shadows were pulled back into the image for contrast.


philgomm.com


Marion Raper

“I have a fascination for any type of trees and really enjoy painting branch shapes and the spaces between them. I know Klimt was more about straight tall pine trees, but I just prefer more movement. In my garden I have two twisty old hawthorn trees with a holly tree between them, which I used as my reference. After painting them I added some gold patterned paper. It turned out more like Clarice Cliff unfortunately!  But hey, it was really satisfying to do.”



James Randall

“Klimt was a young James’ favourite – all that pattern and vibrancy. I tried to sketch up a photo of a tree on the way to a ramshackle holiday rental in a national park along a well rutted sandy dirt road, all gridded up and from a photo. I stopped before adding the tree textures for this image. The trees were black-barked and very dramatic. I hope to paint it up as a momento from one of those blue sky magic moments in life when all seriousness is shed (probably bounced off along that torturous dirt road!).”



Graeme Daly

“I’ve always been fascinated by the detailed scratchings of birch trees, like little beady eyes amongst the white trunks. Back home in Ireland, down a picturesque route swarmed by sleepy sheep, there is a gorgeous forest of sitka spruces and birch trees. My neighbours don’t bat an eyelash when I hop over the fence with my camera in hand. I took a bunch of these photos at different times of the year and made an impressionistic mixed media series a while ago called Lenticels, where I painted over the photos, mimicking the same textures to encapsulate my impressions of this magical place. I loved this series and happened to take more photos this past winter and made a few more to add to the series for this week’s Klimt prompt.”  


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And you never know; if you look into Klimt’s pine forest very closely, you might just see a jabberwocky lumbering between all those tall, straight trees… Beware!



After Hicks #1 (2023)


I was very drawn to Sheila Hick’s fabric marshmallow-y boulders, but knew right away I didn’t have the resources or the space to emulate the scale of Hick’s installations – the prompt for The Kick-About No.79.

I did have at my disposal a large bag of crimped, shredded cardboard used for packing out parcels and I wondered if I could work with it in such a way as to produce some Hicks-inspired forms, while maintaining some of the material’s frizzy, explosive qualities. I flattened out some fine mesh bags onto a table, and on top of that, layered the shredded cardboard, and then dolloped some quick-drying filler onto the cardboard, before gathering the bag up around the mixture and tying the whole thing off like an improbable dumpling and setting it aside to dry. When I unpeeled the bag, I was left with these unravelled sculptural forms, which I then photographed against some solid colour in another nod to Sheila Hicks.  Lots of fun at the arts and crafts table this week!



The Kick-About #79 ‘Sheila Hicks’


Our last Kick-About was a celebration of three year’s worth of mucking about with materials, making, inventing, re-imagining and re-purposing. As a result, I suspect some of us have spaces in our homes beginning to pile high with ad-hoc accretions of creative stuff. In terms of scale, none of us may quite have reached the heights of this week’s prompt, the giant textile installations of Sheila Hicks, though one of us is certainly pushing it…


Jan Blake

“I have no idea why i have never seen the work of Sheila Hicks before and other women artists of this particular era!  What a great discovery. Striking and powerful. Having worked myself within vast architectural spaces and in theatre, I felt a kinship with her idea, attention to spaces and love of masses of colour. I like to see through the colours and the mixing of the layers in relationship to one another as they move, held within a skeletal structure in architectural space. I have been collecting these netting pieces that hold fruit and vegetables and the metal tags that are wound round the end that have been waiting in the wings for an opportunity. Their restriction of colour bothered me at first and yet it was a release to see what i could make with them.  They are bouncy and can be twisted into rather wonderful shapes that brought me back to something more organic and lively. Playing with the results on the computer to find new colours was fun if a little bit frustrating as my tech knowledge is rather limited! I was intrigued though about how the overall texture looked more like a tapestry. More food for thought!


janblake.co.uk


Kerfe Roig

“It’s always harder for me to figure out what to do for a textile artist prompt.  I know and like the work of Sheila Hicks, and especially admire how she has never become stuck in one way of working.  I opened a page in a book I have of her work at random to a commission she did for a NYC Wine Bar that consisted of roughly embroidered circles – they look stuffed, but I decided to paint a mandala and then embroider the entire surface.  My colors are brighter than hers, and my stitching is less irregular, but I think the feeling of it is the same.  Start stitching and see what happens.


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Charly Skilling

“Looking at images of Sheila Hicks’ work, I was struck again by how liquid textiles can appear, and it was with that in mind I started hanging bits of yarn from a garden plant support. I became totally absorbed in the task and consequently spent far, far longer on it than originally intended, but I am quite pleased with the way it turned out.”



Vanessa Clegg

“I recently heard the origins of May Day (around “Mayday”), as in the nautical context, and it was one of those ‘Of course! Why didn’t I know that?’ moments. Anyway, as we’re in May, I decided to combine that with very basic weaving and sort of create a vague story… at least, in my head, as I was re-reading Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber, so the darker fairy tales were ‘woven’ in. The other is improvised!”


vanessaclegg.co.uk


James Randall

“Being the slacker that I am I didn’t find a great deal on the web about Sheila Hicks so I settled on savouring the online visuals and contemplating the art of weaving. Having little in the way of craft skills, I took to the computer for some photo weaving. My idea was to take one pixel wide samples from a thousand photos and as they would be both landscape and portrait oriented combine them into a roughly square image resembling woven fabric. To make them a bit softer looking, I used the warp filter on each strand. I thought I would end up with a soft greyish mass – which I did, but when you zoom in you do get fibres of colour so I think the only way to see it properly is as a high resolution printout. I feel happy to have looked at all the photos – a bit of a self-portrait in a way.”



Phil Gomm

“I was very drawn to Hick’s fabric marshmallow-y boulders but knew right away I didn’t have the resources or the space to emulate the scale of Hick’s installations. But I did have at my disposal a large bag of crimped, shredded cardboard used for packing out parcels and I wondered if I could work with it in such a way as to produce some Hicks-inspired forms, while maintaining some of the material’s frizzy, explosive qualities. I flattened out some fine mesh bags onto a table, and on top of that, layered the shredded cardboard, and then dolloped some quick-drying filler onto the cardboard, before gathering the bag up around the mixture and tying the whole thing off like an improbable dumpling and setting it aside to dry. When I unpeeled the bag, I was left with these unravelled sculptural forms, which I then photographed against some solid colour in another nod to Sheila Hicks. Lots of fun at the arts and crafts table this week!”


philgomm.com


Phil Cooper

“After seeing this prompt a couple of weeks ago, I went and looked up Sheila Hicks’ work online. I would love to see it in person to get the full impact of those huge shapes and the wonderful colour. The pieces I was particularly drawn to were the ones that seemed to be flowing down from the gallery ceilings, they look alive.  For my response, I’ve drifted rather a long way from Sheila Hicks’s joyful and exuberant big shapes and drawn something distinctly malevolent-looking over a photo of an interior space I found in a magazine. I think in artspeak terms one could say the black things are ‘disrupting the space’. It looks more like a horror film than a soft sculpture, oh dear!”


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Graeme Daly

“After having to buy a new washing machine, I kept some of the styrofoam that came in the packaging. Call me a hoarder all you like, but I knew I could make something out of the grooves and shapes warped into the styrofoam mirroring the details of the machine. So I spray painted the styrofoam black and bought a bag of colourful cotton pom-pom balls to design the set of this miniature Hicks installation then lit it ablaze with some dramatic lighting and documented the process. Things took a more sci-fi, macabre turn when I decided to use some red gels.”



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Marion Raper

“It amazes me how Sheila Hicks could have so much time and patience to make her huge fabric sculptures. After looking at her work I embarked on making some giant size Suffolk Puffs.  This takes up quite a lot of material so I decided instead of fastening them together I would just place them at random to make pleasing patterns. In some cases I added some denim strips to finish the design.  It is the sort of thing that has infinite possibilities if you had the resources and I rather enjoyed just playing around.”



Francesca Maxwell

“I knew very little about Sheila Hicks and it was quite inspiring to look at her work and read about her life. Colours, texture and layering, what more can I ask?  So here is my output, an image made by multilayered glass, my default material after inks.  Although it is not soft and warm in the way of Sheila’s choice of textile, it is still very tactile.”


www.FBM.me.uk


And for our next adventure together, the architectural preoccupations of Charles Sheeler (1883 – 1965). Have fun!



After Asawa #1 (2023)


Ruth Asawa’s sculptures – our prompt for The Kick-About No.74 – at once reminded me of the sorts of drawings produced by childhood Spirographs – not so much the organic shapes, but their transparency, layering, and particularly the densifying of line and mesh as the interior and exterior shapes combine.

Without recourse to an abundance of thread (or time), I wondered how I might produce some kind of equivalent impression – of volume, but also some of those wonderful floating overlaps of cross-hatching and shade.

Reaching for some acetate sheets, an old wooden ruler, and a permanent marker, I marked up a few of the sheets with lots of fine straight lines, then turned the sheets into funnels and cones with a square or two of Selotape holding them in place. Turns out, when you photograph these cones, something rather lovely transpires.



The Kick-About #74 ‘Ruth Asawa’


In common with our last Kick-About together, which was inspired by cephalopods (those buoyant, ballooning denizens of the deep), this latest showcase of new works made in a short time features a further array of responses to floating, globular forms – specifically to the work of Ruth Asawa. Happy browsing.


Graeme Daly

“I was reminded very much of the fluid melting magic of lava lamps and, in certain elements of Asawa’s creations, I envisioned eyes that reminded me very much of Hitchcock and Dali’s dream sequence in the film, Spellbound. My images were created from photographing melted wax accumulated on a wine bottle over a period of time, with a couple of videos of my own eyes overlaid on top to pay homage to that surreal dream sequence.”



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Tom Beg

“I like the contradiction in Ruth Asawa’s art in that her sculptures appear like they are born from geometry and mathematics but are actually delicately crafted hand-made pieces made one loop at a time. The black and white photography of her artwork really imbues the sculptures with a dreamy quality I also wanted to try and capture in these images of undulating circles.”


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Phil Gomm

“Ruth Asawa’s sculptures at once reminded me of the sorts of drawings produced by childhood Spirographs – not so much the organic shapes, but their transparency, layering, and particularly the densifying of line and mesh as the interior and exterior shapes combine. Without recourse to an abundance of thread (or time), I wondered how I might produce some kind of equivalent impression – of volume, but also some of those wonderful floating overlaps of cross-hatching and shade. Reaching for some acetate sheets, an old wooden ruler, and a permanent marker, I marked up a few of the sheets with lots of fine straight lines, then turned the sheets into funnels and cones with a square or two of Selotape holding them in place. Turns out, when you photograph these cones, something rather lovely transpires. Who’d have thought it?”


philgomm.com


Vanessa Clegg

“Encasing what, to me, look like eggs in the sculpture of Ruth Asawa, and combining that with the trauma of the internment camp during her childhood, led me to nests (security/home), this one being empty – the cage, rust and decay. Here’s a book: ‘When the Emperor was Divine’ by Julie Otsuka, which tells the story of an American/Japanese family interned during the war. Highly recommended.” Graphite on paper with felt tip on Perspex as top layer.


vanessaclegg.co.uk


Jan Blake

“I felt a sense of a kindred spirit in Ruth Asawa’s work.  The translucence of the hanging sculptures and their derivation from naturally-occurring forms echo my own interests. How curious she was exploring this media many years before and with such versatility AND she had 6 children! She puts my productivity to shame!

I have included in the images a piece I had already started – Pod – and some experiments I have been meaning to do for a while. There is an enormous Cordyline palm that grows in my garden I brought from London nearly 30 years ago as a seeding, which I’d nurtured. It has flourished, so much so it strews plentiful dead swathes of its fronds everywhere. It occurred to me last year that, apart from burning them, I could make use of them, so bundles were made as a temporary fencing, but more kept falling. I started to collect them and strip them apart as they naturally disintegrate into thin strips. It was a bit like making daisy chains as a child, easing holes that became wider to be able to thread them and so on. Soaking them made them more malleable but still tough when I tried to crochet, as Ruth Asawa had done with the metal wire. That was very tricky and needed more time to soak and make them softer to handle… however tiny nests for tiny birds appeared anyway.”


janblake.co.uk


Kerfe Roig

“I went back to my tiny shibori fabric pieces and first did three circles trying to imitate her looped baskets.  I think these were pretty successful.  Then I attempted to layer circles in chain stitch to reproduce the effect of her hanging circles within circles.  I think it might have worked better if I had used one strand of floss instead of two.  But even if it doesn’t resemble Asawa’s layering that closely, it’s an interesting idea for future embroidery explorations.” 


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Phil Cooper

“When I saw the Ruth Asawa prompt I immediately thought of the lampshade in our bedroom, a bulb-shaped wire structure that looks a lot like some of her sculptures. I like Asawa’s work very much and I like our lampshade so this was an opportunity to make something for the Kick-About that drew inspiration from both.

I photographed the lampshade and then put the images through the Procreate and Snapseed editing Apps. The sculptural form of the lampshade got flattened, like a Ruth Asawa construction that had been under a steamroller and then I added colour to liven it up. I ended up with what, to me, look like designs for rugs or tapestries. The Kick-About often leaves me with the feeling that, if I could clone myself and have another three lifetimes, I’d like to be a rug-maker, potter, fabric designer, film-maker etc…”


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Charly Skilling

“I love the simplicity of line and strength of presence of Ruth Asawa’s work and have often thought about how you could achieve something similar. Asawa often uses wire to create shapes that are both sustainable and supported. I have used wire circles to support the main shape, then used balloons and pva glue to ‘encourage’ the crochet to resist gravity.  I don’t know how long my ‘sculpture’ will maintain its shape – and next time I will  spend more time on the mathematics of the shape before starting, rather than working it out as I go along. But, for all that, I have learnt a lot from this exercise and will certainly try it again.”



James Randall

“Thank you Charly for this wonderful prompt and your lovely cephalopod tale last KA. Lots of lovely works. Ruth Asawa’s gentle pieces often feel figurative to me. So I drew up some body shapes and investigated displacement mapping lines across the shapes without a great deal of success. So I turned to filling the shapes with lines that I ‘roughen’ filtered then mirrored these shapes. I layered a couple of photos to form a background then plonked a few test shapes onto the background – they looked insect-like so I kept building up shapes and played with the colours (and line angles to reference weaving) on the rich blue greeen background (which I kept changing). Finally I thought the colour mix needed a dash of yellow green in the background so I combined a few big shapes and filled them with diagonal lines before adding layers of dark graduations left and right to keep the people bugs a bit more contained.”



Gary Thorne

“Amazing that wire can weave such intricate organic forms and leave your 10 digits intact. Local resources return into play for KA#74; as Asawa suggests, play enough with one material and discoveries unfold. Struggles to sway a material to bend your way however, demanded an alternative for the side weave, and to the rescue old-fashioned macrame 3mm cotton-wool twist, adding a pleasing colour. Not a basket for much more than Italian Grissini, but, as a lover of all things Italian, that’s just fine by me.”


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Marion Raper

“I remembered I had made a lot of Irish crochet motifs over the years with wonderful designs from Irish patterns inspired by roses, shamrocks, ferns and leaves. I didn’t want to use PVA to stiffen them so I decided to weave some very fine wire around the edges so I could bend them into some unusual shapes.  This proved a rather tricky business, but when I photographed them hanging in the sunlight they appeared like a small delicate chandelier.”



And to mark the occasion of our 75th prompt, I’m inviting you to one hell of a party…



Un-sofa #1 (2023)


The short version is we bought a new leather sofa recently, which turned out to be too big for the room it was meant for. The sofa came wrapped in plastic – and remains so while we wait for some nice people to come and collect it and take it back to wherever unwanted sofas are destined to go. We have been living with this ‘un-sofa’ for quite a few weeks now – not sitting on it, not daring too, goaded by its postponement of creature comforts. I scowl at it every morning, not least because I was responsible for measuring up and only have myself to blame. Still, what is it that insufferably chipper types say about making lemonade when life gives you lemons (or outsized sofas)? I started noticing how different types of light at different times of day produced strange mountainous terrains out of the plastic wrapping covering the sofa, so with The Kick-About No.71 firmly in mind, I set about investigating them.