tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293893664264584042.post8632031691734265487..comments2016-10-27T04:55:54.998-06:00Comments on ngreen studios: marks and symbolsNancyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02206248434141704556noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293893664264584042.post-66279397041915694182011-07-19T18:34:20.800-06:002011-07-19T18:34:20.800-06:00What an interesting topic and one I've been de...What an interesting topic and one I've been dealing with in my own work lately.<br /><br />I tried on using marks in my work that were inspired by the Celts in their tombs in Ireland or the carvings on the Standing Stones made by the Picts in Scotland. But the marks didn't feel as though they were mine. <br /><br />I tend to make marks on my work very quickly and without conscious thought. The marks seem to be so repetitive, yet somehow I like them. I feel so free when I'm making them, and although I end up covering over many of them in the final painting, I do know they are there.Janice Mason Steeveshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00146958998411894033noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293893664264584042.post-69385714091086167192011-07-13T07:39:52.259-06:002011-07-13T07:39:52.259-06:00I've just read a recent blog post by Rebecca C...I've just read a recent blog post by Rebecca Crowell which referenced your blog about mark making. Like creating layers, I believe mark making is something that is essential to work that is basically non-objective. Mark making is essential to my own work anyway, and I'm discovering an evolution as I develop my voice. Where I used to rely on actual words, which I then obscured, I now tend to use shapes and what looks like symbolic language. My sense is that it deepens my work in both the physical sense and metaphorical sense.Carol Beth Icardhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01024665914873008976noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293893664264584042.post-73543634394075692952011-05-08T09:16:08.305-06:002011-05-08T09:16:08.305-06:00My experience echoes yours, Rebecca. I found the d...My experience echoes yours, Rebecca. I found the draft of this post waiting in blog limbo from April, and actually posted it together with Alphabets (May 6) and Scribbles (May 8). I'm looking forward to some active focus on marks in the next few weeks.<br /><br />May 8, 2011 7:36 AMNancyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02206248434141704556noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293893664264584042.post-32169131899985817652011-05-07T21:50:59.293-06:002011-05-07T21:50:59.293-06:00Great topic--! Some of my favorite graphic symbols...Great topic--! Some of my favorite graphic symbols are really universal, like the arc and the triangle, so it seems a little odd that I regard them as personal. But maybe that makes perfect sense. These simple forms can hold many meanings, different for each of us. <br /><br />I've also found some of my abstract language through scribbling and doodling without much thought. It's interesting what the hand comes up with when the subconscious takes over. <br /><br />But even though I have a decent vocabulary of marks and symbols, I still always sense that my language needs to grow, that there is more to say and some expressive image or mark that is just out of reach. Definitely keeps things interesting.Rebecca Crowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15056569461523788439noreply@blogger.com