Fred Free



How am I going to choose favourites? Is what I asked myself when coming to this artist post. I love the natural quality of his work, and I admire his collage book collections. I urge you to explore more of his work!

Name (Real or Screename): fred free
URL (Blog, Website): http://www.fredfree.com/
Location (Where are you from?): Boston, MA

Q: Describe your work in 10 words or less.
A: Documentationalismistic. And more!




Q: What do you like to work with (magazines, photographs, vintage)? Be specific!
A: Found photos, my photos, diagrams, bar codes, radio static, videoclips, paper and cardboard, pencils, tape, oilbars, toys, numbers, letters, words and sentence fragments, non-english languages, other people, random internet searches, email spam, photoshop, my son, books to put things into, books to take things out of, signs, roads, libraries, fences, big spaces, time, weather, emotions, instinct, process. And glue.

Q: How long have you been creating collages and what made you start?
A: I've been making collages since I was a kid—which means for about 40 years—but I only got more serious about it in the early 90s. I started like any other kid and restarted because I found some old medical photo slides in a trashcan at a laundromat at the right time of my life.




Q: Are you solely an artist, or do you work in another profession?
A: I am an artist and at-home dad for my 8 year old son.

Q: Do you have any formal art training?
A: I went to RISD in the early 80s and came out with degrees and experience in fine arts and architecture, which I practiced into the early 90s.

Q: Explain your favourite techniques.
A: I'm not really into techniques as a focal point in my work so I don't have any favorites to explain. Much of that has to do with coming out of the architecture profession where technique and skill were overly emphasized to the detriment of ideas and experimentation—at least in my experience. Much also has to do with my answer to the next question.

Q: Describe your favourite piece ever created.
A: I don't have a personal favorite, but I have favorite moments though—when the work is flowing out of me in ways that I don't seem to control. There is a feeling that all of the pieces of a potential collage know where they want to go and how they want to get there without my help. It's a trip and i'm just there for the ride.

Q: What other artists do you admire?
A: Rauschenburg, Schwitters, Cornell, Venezky, Wilkins, Tomato, Fluxus, Koolhaas, Holl, Cage, Eno, Byrne, Underworld, Greenaway.

Thanks Fred!

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.notpaper.net/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/81

2 Comments

Fantastic Fred He's such a class act. And a super nice guy.

Ff is such an inspiration, thanks for the chance to glimpse in his head a little more!

Leave a comment

Notpaper is a blog dedicated to showcasing the work of international collage artists. We strive to meet the artists and understand the thoughts behind the process, so interviews with artists are a big part of what we do. If you are new to the site, please enjoy our archives featuring hundreds of collagists!   more 

Contact

Sorry, artwork submissions are temporarily closed.

For any other non submission related inquiries, please email:
info@notpaper.net

Recent Comments

Archives

Categories

Upcoming Events

Recent Tweets

Announcements

8.10.2010

Friends

More Friends

Where In The World

Books

  • BOLO Magazine 1




    "Stars Are Indispensible"

    96 pages in 2 colors, black and blue, 17 x 21.5 cm, 45 contributors from all over the world. The main theme is: "Stars are indispensable". It contains a music cd with 19 tracks.

    Available from BOLO store.

    - - - - - - - - -

  • WAFA Zine 03




    "Everything At Every Moment Is Awaiting Your Arrival."

    Limited Edition of 50 copies. Full color, 3.75 x 5″. Embossed front cover. Hand-sewn Japanese stab stitch binding. Edition number of 50, hand-numbered on reverse.

    Available from WAFA Storefront.

    - - - - - - - - -

  • Masters: Collage


    Major Works by Leading Artists

    Curated by Randel Plowman

    This superb new collection offers a stunning look at contemporary collage work from approximately 40 leading artists.

    Available from Lark Books.

    - - - - - - - - -

  • Cutting Edges: Contemporary Collage


    Edited by R. Klanten, H. Hellige, J. Gallagher

    Cutting Edges documents the new heyday of collage in current art and visual culture.

    Available from Gestalten.

    - - - - - - - - -

  •  more