journal experiment:
surreal impression
Prisoner of Conscience
collage miniature by J A Dixon
7.75 x 9.75 inches
Purchase this artwork!
journal experiment:
surreal impression
Prisoner of Conscience
collage miniature by J A Dixon
7.75 x 9.75 inches
Purchase this artwork!
journal experiment:
activation of space
Circumvent (Bibelot 572)
collage miniature by J A Dixon
5 x 6 inches
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journal experiment:
form, contrast, counterpoise
Heaven By Storm
collage miniature by J A Dixon
4.5 x 4.5 inches
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journal experiment:
shape, color, space
Attempted Coup
collage miniature by J A Dixon
5.25 x 7.25 inches
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“I have been producing collages for nearly fifty-five years, many of the early ones were done during long flights or in the waiting areas at airports.”
— Richard Meier
This season of the year finds many artists visiting family and friends. My spending time as a traveler without the suppletory activity of creating art makes for a less than satisfying experience. Visiting new places or returning to familiar haunts is noticably deficient if not combined with sketching or assembling ingredients for a collage experiment. Of course, we all need to relax now and then, sharing time with people who mean the most to us, but many of us also recognize a price to pay whenever the creative urge is asked to take a back seat for any length of time. What better opportunity than a change of environment to infuse our investigations with a fresh dose of spontaneity?
The sabbatical is a time-honored tradition for creative people, which brings to mind Cecil Touchon’s remarkable Paris Papers. But in contrast to this kind of planned artistic get-away, there is also much to be gained by a custom of fusing the influences of short-term travel with an ongoing artistic process. This makes me think of the highly publicized collage artwork of American architect Richard Meier. I saw something years ago which suggested the collage-making proclivity that runs parallel to his professional practice developed from the found material he acquired crisscrossing continents as an in-demand designer, and that many of the early works were created on airliners. I remember being impressed with his wooden case, crafted to accommodate several square working surfaces plus the modest number of accourtrements a collage artist requires to do one’s thing. No doubt his days of transporting blades and scissors on aircraft are part of the past. The status of being a celebrated architect has provided Meier ample “rare” opportunities to showcase examples of his collage. Whether or not the eventual significance of his work within the medium will prove commensurate with the attention it has already received remains a matter of opinion (like nearly everything in the art world).
Two years ago, I had the privilege to view a milestone exhibition of Kurt Schwitters originals at the Berkeley Art Museum. During my stay in Northern California, a brother-in-law was kind enough to let me set up a makeshift work area in his home office so that I could capture as collage experiments the flow of new stimuli. Please allow me to share two of those artworks for the first time:
Untitled (Back to California, part one)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
8 x 9.5 inches, not for sale
Untitled (Back to California, part two)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
8.5 x 7.5 inches, not for sale
“All the works of man have their origin in creative fantasy.”
— Carl Jung
Anyone who thinks that everything about collage is known is probably stuck in a dull place. Continuous experimentation is vital, whether or not we divulge or share the products of our investigation, and constructive self-criticism is essential, if one is to avoid the pitfall of “artistic comfort.”
Untitled (kaleidoscope)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
4 x 3.75 inches, not for sale
its You
collage experiment by J A Dixon
4.375 x 3 inches, not for sale
Reign Glorious
collage experiment by J A Dixon
3.25 x 4.5 inches, not for sale
6 Pads Of Time
collage experiment by J A Dixon
3 x 4.25 inches, not for sale
84 Tonal Impressions
collage experiment by J A Dixon
3 x 4.25 inches, not for sale
Untitled (overlook)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
5 x 7.75 inches, not for sale
“The true method of knowledge is experiment.”
— William Blake
Conducting intuitive experiments with eventual disclosure in mind may defeat their purpose at some level, but it can be beneficial at times to share the creative process that leads to new works. Nevertheless, the primary purpose of experimentation is to remove oneself from the context of producing something to be held up for evaluation by others. To investigate. To explore. To defy one’s own expectations.
Untitled (shards)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
4.5 x 7.5 inches, not for sale
suite)Shoes
collage experiment by J A Dixon
3.25 x 3.25 inches, not for sale
Untitled (la vie moderne)
collage experiment by J A Dixon
5 x 3.625 inches, not for sale
The New Number Two
collage experiment by J A Dixon
5.5 x 3.75 inches, not for sale
Morning Bancha
collage experiment by J A Dixon
3 x 3 inches, not for sale