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Drawing with Wood

By: Helen Thompstone

The project will attempt to explore the craft of Marquetry and the potential uses for this within a contemporary visual Art practice. Through research, making and conversation the work will question what it means to work with wood, specifically veneer and associated techniques. The Staffordshire Marquetry group will play a role in the project, sharing guidance and expertise.

Helen Thompstone, 'Leafy Stump', Marquetry, 2008.

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Helen Thompstone, 'Leafy Stump', Marquetry, 2008.

# 42 [9 May 2008]

Back to the start 

 

I am thinking now about why I started this project in the first place and all the things I haven’t done or have, inadvertently. One reason I really came to thinking about Marquetry at the beginning quite simply because trees have featured in previous work. I wanted to work with wood and to make a connection to this aspect of nature in some other way than I had before. I suppose taking a more direct approach to a material I hoped to be able to actually make things for a change, develop a skill that was closer to the formal approaches that I had left behind or dismissed during Art College.

 

 I have way too many ideas on how I could develop what I have started and I don’t think trying to slot a very specific and skilful craft into my existing practice was  necessarily an easy thing to do. I now have this completely new angle on my work that I am trying to figure out where to place?  

 

I picked up the observer book of trees, an old copy and it was written by the same man who wrote the book on rural crafts that I dipped into at the start of this. I thought it was quite fitting that these two points met without me knowing it and that my interests too haven’t digressed too much either, I think I have kept things relevant even if they didn’t seem so at the time.

'Helen Thompstone'. Work of a child

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'Helen Thompstone'. Work of a child

# 41 [5 May 2008]

What other people do

I had a good day yesterday, doing my activities with people, most of whom hadn't encountered Marquetry before. Preparing for something like this has given me more ideas for my own work.

The exhibition itself was very interesting -to see what goes on in  Marquetry circles -and though I feel quite removed from it on one level, I admire the skill, time and investment in this craft. It is quite amazing to see, especially listening to other peoples reactions when they realise the process behind it. It isn't like amateur painting or photography, it feels very unique, obsessive and unpretentious.

I like what other people do, particulary the public and I felt like I had something to offer.

Hands on geometric

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Hands on geometric

Bird

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Bird

rolls

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rolls

# 40 [3 May 2008]

Activities 

Today the National Marquetry Exhibition opens in Stoke on Trent. This is the show of the membership organisation ‘The Marquetry society’ so not something I am exhibiting in. I will however be at the venue tomorrow, hosting an activity based around Marquetry but not the activity itself. By this I mean I am not using actual veneers or making ‘real’ Marquetry but facilitating something to illustrate the principles of the craft using a much quicker and child friendly process.  

 I have been preparing for this for a while ( it has crept up on me) although various other things have got in the way, but then they always do. So rushing around for materials and collecting together my ideas.  

I don’t even know whether I will get to make this entry as the site seems to be down as I write this Saturday May 3rd, which is typical having not added to the blog for a month and now needing to and not being able. (it started working again) 

 I have prepared lots of Vinyl sticky back veneer effect sheet which will be the main material for the public to work with. Despite being wholly artificial the grains on these different rolls are actually pretty interesting and surprisingly effective. I’ve tried to devise enough activities for different ages, applying different stages of the process of marquetry. Really it’s about looking and working with a grain but I will be looking forward to seeing if it works for a session like this and to get some response. I hope it will be pretty relaxed but it could be a disaster?

 

 Location- The Gladstone pottery museum, Stoke on Trent- 12-4 free entry. Tomorrow May 4th

 

Helen Thompstone. More woodworm

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Helen Thompstone. More woodworm

# 39 [1 April 2008]

April

I only posted once in March, should I feel guilty? I probably wouldn't even be writing this if someone that I know hadn't have got in touch today to say the had looked at the blog.

It was a good prompt anyway.

I am going to be running a workshop in conjunction with the National marquetry exhibition in Stoke next month. This got decided quite last minute and has given me a lot of stuff to think about and organise. This is good and has given me motivation where I was struggling.

I feel like I have made an opportunity for myself which I am pleased about and returned to my original focus of working up to this particular event or at least having something to show for the past few months.   

Unknown artist. Charity shop find

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Unknown artist. Charity shop find

# 38 [10 March 2008]

Finding things

I found a tray in a charity shop constructed from a marquetry design. It was too nice to not buy and someone had clearly spent a lot of time on it. I am finding that time is something I am short of and fitting in significant periods of making anything is hard but I am thinking about the project a lot as I do other things.

I bought some nice veneers from a craft shop and the man told me that a lot of the materials they sell are the off cuts from car manufacture. Particularly one which came from jaguar- a manmade veneer that he called snake eye.

Ready for the floor

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Ready for the floor

# 37 [21 February 2008]

Hot Chip

The electo pop-ish band Hot chip have an intriguing cover to their latest single. It looks like a lumpy marquetry mass. Their album covers have been good in the past so I was pleased to see this and wonder where it came from?

# 36 [17 February 2008]

Working with others

Working in schools has given me reason to think how this project could be shared with young people. Sharp knives and small children not being a great combination, other ways of applying the basic principles of working with veneer are possible.

The work I have done using vinyl sheets  could be an ideal way of producing collaborative, community and education work. The direction of the project might focus on this as I look ahead and balance working alone with others. At a point where I felt I needed to change my way of working this seems like a productive and worthwhile thing to focus on. In conjunction with the National Marquetry exhibition this may work well, better in fact than simply trying to present my own work in some way.

# 35 [5 February 2008]

Where am I now? 

 

When I started this project I was aware that the National marquetry society exhibition was to be hosted in Staffordshire in 2008. To be looking into the craft in the run up to this seemed a logical move for me having been thinking about this for a while. Producing a piece of writing, or work or having something to say about what I have been doing by the time of the exhibition would be ideal.

 The event for the Marquetry society and members is the biggest in their calendar and a big undertaking by the hosts. It would be nice if my project contributed in some way to drawing attention to this as a form of visual art and an activity with artistic potential for different kinds of people.  

 How I go about this without encroaching on the exhibition poses another question. It isn’t really about offering an alternative but looking at what I have found and developed from mainstream ‘traditional’ contemporary marquetry. Raising awareness of others using similar techniques as a way to make work, should be something to be shared.

 I feel I have opened up a range of ways of working for myself but am also overwhelmed by what understanding a craft like this means and beginning to know where to fit it with other work.

 I also wonder at this point how long I will keep writing here as I try to think what to do next with it all.

Helen Thompstone, 'Walnut Tree', Sticky back Beech and Walnut.

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Helen Thompstone, 'Walnut Tree', Sticky back Beech and Walnut.

# 34 [31 January 2008]

Vinyl Marquetry

I've tried to incorporate other materials into my work and plastic is one that isn't entirely alien to marquetry.

'Marquetry' by Pierre Raymond is a comprehensive book that charts the history, development, tools and techniques of the craft. It covers many angles and has been really useful to me over the past few months.

 Plastic gets a mention alongside natural materials, whale bone, ivory, mother of pearl, coral as well as many metals.

Using the figure of the grain from a roll of vinyl 'veneer' (sticky back plastic with a wood effect) I have made  a picture. My avoidance of pictorial work so far has been evident so making a 'proper' picture from a synthetic material has a hint of irony. As well as the materials being off the shelf at Wilkinsons.

Giving the sheets a firm backing I have cut the veneers into one another as normal. One was an imitation Beech design and the other a Walnut burr - both had surprisingly interesting qualities to their make up.

# 33 [24 January 2008]

Quilting for men

I read this definition yesterday and found it quite funny. 'Male Quilting' was a term applied to Marquetry after labour intensive woodworking had become less in demand and relegated to folk art status. Hobbyist work was seen to have a similar relationship to quilting and stitch work.

I thought a bit about this earlier in the project, that Marquetry seems a male dominated craft. The intricacy and detail does have a lot in common with needle work though so the link made in this description makes sense. Quilting seems an obsessive hobby, requiring patience as well as creativity- much as marquetry does.

I don't know much about quilting but historically it was something that required many hours of work. Huge pieces produced by women over many years and continued through subsequent generations, all by hand.

 Working delicate pieces of veneer is like working with fabric in many ways, creating joins and fusing materials together.

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Helen Thompstone

A visual artist based in Staffordshire

helen_thompstone@hotmail.com