Results tagged “collage” from Fernhill Art Studio

Spring Bird on Arbutus Stump.jpg
Spring Bird on Arbutus Stump
Mixed media collage on paper
8" x 10" (matted)
$50



This small mixed media collage started out as a  larger painting titled Arbutus Trees in Spring (see photo below).
Arbutus-Trees-in-Spring-1.jpg

Although I liked the painting well enough, I thought I could strengthen it by taking it further. So I cut it up and rearranged it. I'm glad I did because I think the new collage is more interesting than the original one.

Spring Bird on Arbutus Stump is collage with acrylic paint and oil pastel.  The actual artwork is 5" x 7", but with the mat the size is 8" x 10". Slip it into a standard 8 x 10 frame and you'll have yourself a nice little original artwork for a great price.

3 Reasons

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3-Reasons-to-Use-It-500px.jpg
3 Reasons
collage
9" x 15"
$50


I started this collage in a workshop several years ago.  Today I pulled it out and completed it. 
To me this collage conveys a long, full and useful life.

The patchwork quilt is a metaphor for making the most of what life presents. The title comes from the small collage element in the lower right corner, which says "3 Reasons to Use It".  The large black area is acrylic paint and the handwriting is in silver ink.


Goddess of Abundance

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Corn-Goddess.jpgGoddess of Abundance
mixed media on board
11" x 7"
$50 sold

This is the first of my daily paintings. I used collage, acrylics, and oil pastel.  It was fun to make and I'm delighted with it!

The central image of the mature woman in all her glory comes from an IKEA print ad.  She looks so happy and comfortable with herself. There is something subversive about a naked older woman, and that appealed to me a great deal :)

I perched her on a throne of weathered stone to reflect her experience and "solidness".

The other main element is the gigantic corn stalk. I must admit that I wasn't thinking about the symbolic meaning of corn when I choose it.  I just liked the masculine, shall we say..."upthrusting" of it. 

Seriously now, the juxtaposition of the feminine and masculine in that weathered setting worked for me. 

Later, it occured to me that corn is probably symbolic of something.  I looked it up and found out that corn symbolizes plenty. According to PhoenixMasonry:

An ear of grain has been an emblem of plenty since the mists of antiquity which shroud the beginnings of mythology. Ceres, goddess of abundance, survives today in our cereals. The Greeks called her Demeter, a corruption of Gemeter, our mother earth. She wore a garland of grain and carried ears of grain in her hand...The Hebrew Shibboleth means both an ear of corn and a flood of water. Both are symbols of abundance, plenty, wealth.