Interview with Laura Collins - Mixed Media - Chicago, IL
Laura Collins is a Chicago based artist working in various mediums including collage, oil, and ink. She received a Bachelor’s of Fine and Applied Arts degree in painting from the University of Illinois and recently completed a Master's of Arts degree in New Media Studies from DePaul University.
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Tell me about your work?
My work is kind of all over the place, I sort of have a hard time focusing on one specific way of making an image. That being said, my work has been most recently based in silkscreen, but I've been working on taking silkscreen techniques and applying them to other mediums like gouache painting and digital illustrations. My subject matter tends to be somewhat introspective or based around a specific memory or phrasing of words.
What are you currently working on?
I'm in my final year at the School of Visual Arts in New York so right now I'm working on my final portfolio. It's still in its baby stages, but my intent is to create a series based on different homes and buildings I remember from throughout my life. It's kind of narrative, but the buildings will sort of become the main characters of the illustrations rather than the people who occupy them.
How is it different from past projects?
I'm trying to slow down my mark making a bit, and given the architectural nature of this project I feel like I'll have no choice but to take my time a little more. I'm also trying to implement some techniques that are new to me like handmade textures and implementing them into the silkscreen process. I'm also trying to relax with this project and let everything fall into place as I work rather than be frustrated with trying to make a really specific predetermined image.
How did you become aware of your interest in print making?
I found myself attracted to images with flat, graphic color without really knowing how those images were made, and I kind of failed miserably trying to replicate that flat effect through painting and drawing. Then during my sophomore year at SVA I took a class with Josh Cochran who urged us all to take at least one printmaking class, just to see how it worked and to see how the process can help inform other mediums that involve layering or the breakdown of colors. After that, I taught myself to lino cut, and was pretty drawn to that process of mark making as an alternative to traditional drawing, which I had struggled with so much in the past. I took my first silkscreen class with David Sandlin in 2012 and it has since been my preferred medium.
Was there a specific aspect to print making that attracted you?
Mostly the idea of multiples, I like that I can make 20 prints of an original image and that each image can be exactly the same or have slight variations or even small imperfections. Despite silkscreen having a pretty specific process that needs to be followed to create an image it still allows for a lot of experimentation. Also printmaking people are some of the coolest people. Everyone at the print shop is just really excited about making stuff, and that in itself is incentive to keep making things myself.
What is your creative process like?
This honestly varies from project to project. If I work one specific way for a long time, the process tends to get monotonous and I get bored. Some projects involve a pretty intense sketch phase while other times I'll skip the sketch altogether and just go straight to a final image.
Where do you pull inspiration from?
Inspiration is something I try to not sit around and wait for, if I'm feeling slumped I'll usually try to get myself to keep drawing as a way of sort of getting all the muck out of my head. I feel like you have to get all the shitty drawings and ideas out first before something that feels right starts to happen. That being said sometimes there are days when I'm stuck and am really bad at getting myself to keep drawing so I'll go for a walk or something that will hit the reset button in my head. Though honestly sometimes I'll just take a nap.
Is there anything you are trying to communicate through your work?
This varies from piece to piece but I suppose most of the stuff I make carries a sense of playfulness or something akin to it. At least that's what I've been told.
What was the best advice given to you as an artist?
This line from 'De Daumier-Smith's Blue Period':
"The worst that being an artist could do to you would be that it would make you slightly unhappy constantly"
What is your goal for your work in the near future?
Just to never not be making things, it's the only way to get anything done.









