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Helen Terry

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Found marks and ambiguity

October 12, 2015

A visit to the RHS garden at Hyde Hall this weekend.  While everyone else was admiring views through the gardens, autumn flowers or leaves, I was peering at tree trunks.  I was drawn to the variety of marks and patterns on the bark of the birches in particular.  The lines suggest stitches.  Or signal traces - morse code, electronic pulses.  There's just enough suggestion of some kind of order without repetition.  The way the lines were interrupted or changed by other marks - lichen, cracks or scars - also interested me.  

View fullsize birch bark Helen Terry-2.jpg
View fullsize birch bark Helen Terry-3.jpg
View fullsize birch bark Helen Terry-4.jpg
View fullsize birch bark Helen Terry.jpg

Something I have been reading: 

“There is a human need to make sense from the random confusion of the world, to process our perceptions as we experience them, and to structure them as best we can. ... vision is an active process in which the brain attempts to make sense of the information it receives from the eyes. ”
— Derek Horton, Introduction "Drawing Ambiguity" (2015)

Exploring this process of perception and interpretation is at the heart of what I like to do.  But at the same time I think marks and imagery are more interesting if they never quite resolve themselves but  remain somewhat unexplained.  Ambiguity leaves room for a wider range of interpretation.  As soon as they resolve themselves into something definite it closes off some of the possible layers of meaning - which is far less engaging in my view.  

“Ambiguity is a property of the interpretative relationship between people and things or ideas (or representations of them). ... In other words, things and ideas are not inherently ambiguous; rather, ambiguity arises in their interpretation.”
— Derek Horton, as before

The interpretation placed upon marks or images relates as much to the observer's own experience and concerns as anything in the imagery itself.  I may have certain intentions for my work but am sometimes surprised by the things other people see.  This is both rewarding and challenging.  In some ways it is more challenging when I am working with marks that are less abstract.  I like to retain that tension where the observer is not quite certain how to interpret the imagery.  But the opposite problem is avoiding the kind of wilful obscurity or mystification that is merely annoying: 

“... ambiguity’s value is determined by the quality of interpretation and the meaning that is derived from it. Ambiguity is not a virtue in itself and it can end up being merely confusing, frustrating or meaningless”
— Derek Horton, as before

Plenty to think about while I develop and refine the pieces I'm working on in the studio.  

In Mark making, Photography, Thinking Tags Found marks, Birch, Lines, Ambiguity, Interpretation, Liminality

Helen Terry

fabric, colour, texture, art, craft, creativity.

 

This is a place to keep track of what's inspiring or interesting me,  and how this shapes the thinking that goes into my work.  


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