Behind the Scenes: What Goes into Making an Art Collection?
I finished the last two piece of Elements of Rest the other day. Layers of pigment, rust, limestone, and texture medium carefully applied, dried, and varnished. Stepping back, I admired weeks of work now beautifully displayed on thick rectangular canvases, mounted in gorgeous maple wood frames. These were the two largest pieces in the collection…and they gave me the most trouble. I use the word “trouble” but really the proper word would be “indecision”.
I went back and forth for weeks trying to decide how I wanted to apply the paint to these two pieces. While the smaller works stacked up piece after completed piece, these two struggled to tell me how they should start and end. (Notice I passed the blame to them…not me, never me…) The first layers on both of the 24”x36” canvases stayed untouched the majority of this Collection’s formation. I would come back to them and think for a bit then walk away to work on another piece. I almost decided not to include them in this Collection release. They were becoming a headache. Finally, a decision was made, we all agreed on the course of action, the canvases cooperated, and here we are. The first and largest pieces I started on, were the last to be completed. They are absolutely gorgeous!
Had I not told you all this, you’d have never known the trouble, I mean, indecision, these two pieces gave me. This got me thinking of all the other behind the scenes things that the average person may not know happens when an art collection is forming. So, I figured I’d give you a little glimpse into the process.