Final Expansive Painting
Left: Alphabet Soup by Elba Obregon (2020)
Right: Flame Tree, Plume Smoke Bush and Lamb’s Wool by Anna Kristensen (2012)
For my final expansive painting, I wanted to focus on how it is possible to make reductive paintings into expansive paintings later on. The canvas of my expansive painting is actually the experiment I used when I was working on my reductive painting. I had originally focused on the sunset paper clipping that is in my original assemblage, and reduced that into geometric shapes. Once I reduced the water, sun, sky, and clouds into rectangles, I had a completely new perspective on what the sunset from my original assemblage could look like when I looked at it through different lenses.Â
With that in mind, I wanted to use that reduced painting to create my expansive painting, and see just how much more I could push myself as an artist to work with the resources I have to create something new. In my expansive piece (pictured above) I used letters from the words in my assemblage to create an alphabet-soup-like representation of all of the words in the original image. I liked that it is not obvious what words any of the letters come together to form, as I believe it adds whimsy to the overall painting. Also, in my original assemblage, there was a heavy presence of nature spread throughout the piece. In my expansive painting, I didn't want to lose that, which is why there are large leaves and flowers in the piece. Furthermore, because I already had a colorful base to work off of, figuring out the other colors I wanted to add to the piece allowed me to think about how the use of color can work to expand a painting by making the artist think about how brighter colors may make a a painting seem more expansive and loud, while more muted colors may be useful in the reduction of a painting.Â
As far as artists who inspired me throughout the expansive painting process, I was drawn to Anna Kristensen’s Flame Tree, Plume Smoke Bush, and Lamb’s Wool because of the artist’s use of vibrant colors. The use of red and blue specifically provided great contrast to this painting and the way the artist layered paintings over others (or at least gave the illusion of layering) was something that I wanted to incorporate in my own piece.Â









