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ABSTRACT LINES230

   Collage

                HERE WE EXPERIMENT with collage, which is the shifting,       ready-made depths and surfaces; an infinite range of voices
                overlapping placement of materials on a flat plane. Cut or    and meaning. Images and fragments torn from day-to-day
                torn layers and shapes, found or made items, colors and       life can be brought together to make a chorus of ideas and
                textures can be manipulated until their pictorial harmony,    emotions. Returning to Russell Page, he went on to say
                or discordance, feels "just" (see pp.228-29). This principal  "... you start composing by adding or subtracting shapes
                also applies to three-dimensional drawings such as Gaudi's    and textures and using colors and tones to achieve the
                work with wire and weights on p.69 and Abe's installation     impression you want to make—whether dramatic or
                on p.220. Collage offers the artist a liberating palette of   subdued, hard or soft, harmonious, or even strident."

                SETTING UP

                This lesson in collage is a direct continuation of the compositional lines made
                in the previous class. Once the ten painted black sticks are set and glued in
                place, they become a scaffold for the addition of further textures, colors,
                and tones. To prepare for this lesson, stain and dry a sheet of tissue paper
                using blueink.Youwill also need spare white paper; scissors, glue, a compass,
                correction fluid or white paint, and black ink.

                "My understanding is that every object [or shape] emanates—sends out
                vibrations beyond its physical body which are specific to itself."

                                                                                                                                          (Russell Page)
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