« paperfont | Main | falling ruin »

rachel t robertson

Rachel describes her own work perfectly, I almost don't have to! This shows how much she really knows herself and her work, and I admire that. My mind probably changes every week. The one thing that really fascinated me about her work, other than the soft, natural feeling, was that she uses a grid in most of her pieces. Whether it's visible or not, it's there, and it stands out from a lot of collages which can sometimes be hectic and devoid of structure. I would add "soothing" to her list of words.

Name (Real or Screename): Rachel T. Robertson
URL (Blog or Website): www.racheltrobertson.com, www.racheltrobertson.etsy.com
Location (Where are you from?): San Francisco, born in Wisconsin

Q: Describe your work in 10 words or less.
A: Quiet, botanical, detailed, layered and stitched.

Q: What do you like to work with (magazines, photographs, vintage)? Be specific!
A: I like to work with papers of all kinds: printmaking, tracing, marbled, painted, gridded, lined and printed. I also like to incorporate found papers/ephemera (old envelopes, postcards, book plates) as well as postage stamps. Photos sometimes. Needle and thread always. I have also been known to chop up some of my old artwork into pieces that I reuse in new work.

Q: How long have you been creating collages and what made you start?
A: I've been making collages since college. It actually started in a Sculpture class. I made some 3-D pieces that were very collage-like and something sort of clicked in my head. Assembling various elements together into one piece made lots of sense to me and seemed like second nature. I started doing that with my 2-D work and I haven't stopped since.

Q: Are you solely an artist, or do you work in another profession?
A: I have a full-time job as a retail display designer.

Q: Do you have any formal art training?
A: I have a B.S. in Art from University of Wisconsin-Madison.


Q: Explain your favourite techniques.
A: I like layering transparent/semi-transparent papers with my own drawings and found papers. I am obsessed with stitching things together either by hand or with a sewing machine.

Q: Describe your favourite piece ever created.
A: One piece that I really like is very simple. It's 8.5" x 11" and consists mainly of 1) a background made from a fragment of an old black and white etching I did in school with subtle botanical pencil drawings, 2) a small rectangle of cantaloupe orange painted paper covered with an outline of a maple tree sprout done on tracing paper in ink 3) a postage stamp with a butterfly 4) a long thin strip of orange paper running down the left hand border half obscured by a piece of semi-transparent rice paper 5) tiny hand stiches done with off-white thread scattered across the piece.

Q: What other artists do you admire?
A: I like so many that it is difficult to list them all. Among the artists/designers I admire, in no particular order: Robert Rauschenberg, David Hockney, Robin & Lucienne Day, Lotta Jansdotter, Thomas Campbell, Joseph Cornell, Charles & Ray Eames, Hans Wegner, Alexander Girard, Richard Diebenkorn, Isamu Noguchi, Hella Jongerius, Phoebe Washburn just to name a few.

Thanks Rachel!

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.notpaper.net/mt-tb.cgi/201

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on September 17, 2008 6:42 PM.

The previous post in this blog was paperfont.

The next post in this blog is falling ruin.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.33