Two Women Talk: No. 3 BONUS!
Hello kind readers! This is a bonus post from Two Women Talk as we have a fun announcement...
Ellen and I have decided to do a 7 Day Series project in July. Something to celebrate summer, something to do while the heat keeps us in, something for the sheer fun of it while we experiment and practice our mutual love for analogue photography.
During the week of July 5 - 12, we will each be making a handmade, camera-less photo, one every day, on 5x7ish natural fiber papers of our choice using sun sensitive chemistry - literally painting with light. Each photogram will be one of a kind, a unique creation difficult to reproduce due to the nature of the heat, light angle, exposure time, and amount of chemistry combinations. Unless they are measured and repeated exactly, the outcome will vary. I don't often exactly measure things - much like how I cook - I intuitively add ingredients as I go along..."that tastes about right, let's go with that" kind of approach. We are limiting the use of tools, substrates, and chemistry to challenge ourselves to make something every day with the same materials. Ellen will be using items to "photograph" natural to her PNW world, and I, from my California camp travels and desert world. If you'd like to see what we've created, we will be posting our daily pieces at the following IG profiles. We'd love it if you subscribed to follow our adventure:
Diana (@mojavelight) and Diana again (@projectmojavelight)
Two Women Talk - our new collaborative IG project page! <--This is where we will post images of our work, one each, to share the visual aspect of our collaboration.
Why do a daily practice? For just that reason - to practice, to play, to experiment, to learn... For us, it's a working meditation. It is so freeing to be making art for the sake of expression and exploration, not to just sell or show in a gallery or exhibition. Those avenues are great, too, don't get me wrong. But, art has more resonance and relevance if it's freely made from the heart and vibrations of the soul. Otherwise, it feels contrived and commercialized. In my opinion anyway....
This is pretty much what I'm limiting myself to for that entire week:
5x7 hot pressed Arches watercolor paper, archival tissue paper (to write on and then melt onto the print with wax), and a cold wax varnish finish...
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