Artist Interview: Kathy Hutton

I'm a curious type; I like to know what informs an artist. Who or what do they look to for inspiration? How do they work? Each month I will be asking an artist I admire a few questions, this month is Kathy Hutton.

Stacking Bowls Print by Kathy Hutton Using Silkscreen, Block Print, Jelly Print & Monoprinting Techniques

Stacking Bowls Print by Kathy Hutton Using Silkscreen, Block Print, Jelly Print & Monoprinting Techniques

Kathy, I've been following your work for some years now, you seem to be able to turn your hand to so many printmaking techniques with beautiful results. What method of printmaking is your favourite and why?

I love to use different printing techniques depending on the feel that I want to achieve and I often end up using multiple techniques in one print, however if I had to choose my absolute favourite technique it would be the mono-printed line (sometimes called a mono-trace).

It’s due to this technique that I feel happy drawing and have a confidence in my lines. It sounds strange but it’s both unforgiving and forgiving at the same time! I’m drawing directly into the black ink so there is nowhere to hide, you can’t erase the marks once made so you just have to be brave. With a pencil on paper I dither, I use far too many lines and they have no confidence. But with this technique I’m forced to choose a line and go with it! It sounds terrifying but actually I find it completely freeing.

At the same time, the paper is also picking up little accidental marks and smudges from the ink, these add character to the drawing in a way that cannot be controlled. These little quirks are part of the forgiving nature and are what makes each and every drawing unique.

It’s also a completely instant technique, which can’t be said for many printing techniques that often involve preparation in different stages. With a mono print as you are drawing, you are creating the print there and then; for someone like me who is a little impatient, this is a real treat! As I’m drawing I’m concentrating only on the item I’m drawing and so in that moment I feel very connected. Linking eye and hand with a pencil and a bit of ink!

Sweet Pea Print by Kathy Hutton Using Monotype

Sweet Pea Print by Kathy Hutton Using Monotype

Sweet Pea Print by Kathy Hutton Using Monotype

Sweet Pea Print by Kathy Hutton Using Monotype

Nature appears to be your biggest source of inspiration, what is it about recording nature that appeals to you?

I’ve become fascinated by the natural things growing around my home, in the fields and lanes beyond our garden. The more I look, the more I see. It’s become a bit of an obsession and through it I’ve become much more aware of the changing seasons and their effects. I’m especially interested in the everyday; fallen leaves, seed heads and berries.

I thought that in the midst of winter I would struggle to find inspiration, but actually I find these quieter months are full of fallen treasure ready to be pocketed and brought home to be studied further. In the summer when there is so much competing, I have to work harder to be still and for my eye to notice the little things I seek.

The beauty of nature is that it’s constantly changing so if you keep looking you will always find something of inspiration and you never have to travel far.

Legume 1 Hand Drawn Monotype Print by Kathy Hutton

Legume 1 Hand Drawn Monotype Print by Kathy Hutton

You are based in Wiltshire, does the area local to you influence your work at all?

I love living in Wiltshire with its proximity to open countryside and urban cultural areas (which I’m aware I’m not making the most of at the moment with my youngest daughter still being so young). I’m very lucky to live nearby to our National Arboretum which is a constant source of inspiration and great for getting the children involved in finding treasures.

However as I tend to draw inspiration from the little details rather than the overall landscape, I’m happy exploring fields, mountains and coastline wherever I find myself. My children sometimes get impatient with me when we're off exploring and have been known to shout ‘stop looking at nature’ if I dally behind too long!


Tell me about your studio or creative space.

I’m very lucky to have a studio space at home. It’s fairly large and has big windows on 3 sides so it feels light and airy. It used to have pink carpet, pink rag-rolled walls with pink satin curtains but thankfully now it has a simple painted concrete floor and white walls that are perfect for hanging prints on or just taping up any works in progress. I don’t have any big printing equipment, just a couple of big reclaimed work tables that can be moved around depending on what I’m using them for, allowing me to change the space for workshops or open studios as and when I need to. The space kind of evolves as I go along. I’d love to have a drying rack so I’m keeping my eyes peeled for one as currently I need every bit of table top and floor space I can get to lay out prints between their different drying stages.

Large Stacking Bowl Prints by Kathy Hutton

Large Stacking Bowl Prints by Kathy Hutton

You run printmaking workshops from your beautiful home studio, is teaching your craft to others important to you?

I love teaching my workshops. I have such a passion for printing that it’s great to share this with others. One of my favourite things is to watch their reaction as they peel back their prints and see them for the first time, it really is a special moment. I love being able to show someone a technique that they can carry on at home. And I’m constantly learning; everyone that comes in my studio brings another view point, another experience, a question that gets me thinking. When you work on your own a lot, this interaction with others is invaluable. At the end of a workshop I will always come away with fresh ideas.


What artists (living or dead) inspire you?

From a very young age the simple pared back line work of Dick Bruna made a big impact on me, he was a master of perfecting the minimal line. Growing up we had some Mid-Winter pottery at home which I always loved and later on I became more aware of my love of ceramics, both their shapes and surface patterns.  I’m especially drawn to the designs created by Jessie Tate and Terrance Conran and the textile designs of Lucienne Day, simplified motifs, use of repeating lines and scratchy marks. I also have a huge love of the open, negative space and simple form found in William Scott’s work. Last year I discovered the beautiful paintings of Rachel Nicolson, her pared down still life’s featuring favourite ceramic pieces are beautiful.
 

Blue Stripe Bowl Print by Kathy Hutton Using Screen-print and Mono-print Techniques

Blue Stripe Bowl Print by Kathy Hutton Using Screen-print and Mono-print Techniques

Bowl Study Print by Kathy Hutton Using Screen-print and Mono-print Techniques

Bowl Study Print by Kathy Hutton Using Screen-print and Mono-print Techniques

I love learning random facts about people, tell me something about yourself.

When I first moved from London to Wiltshire, a scary 16 years ago now, I enrolled on an evening class to learn quilt-making, anyone who has seen me at a sewing machine will think this a very unsuitable art-form for me! However, I think I’m drawn to the bold blocks of colour and simple compositions especially when applied in a less rigid format. If you’re familiar with the incredible work produced by the quilters of Gee’s Bend, you will know what I mean.

You never know, one of these day I might actually finish a quilt of my own!


Finally, where can people follow your work online?

Kathy Hutton Prints on Etsy
www.kathyhutton.com
@kathyhuttonprints on Instagram
@hutton1kathy on Twitter
Kathy Hutton Prints on Facebook
kathyhutton1 on Pinterest


Thank you to Kathy for taking part in my artist interview series. I adore Kathy's use of line and am highly envious of her beautiful studio. Kathy sells her work on her Etsy store and teaches workshops at her studio. Please click the following links to learn more: Kathy Hutton Online Shop / Kathy Hutton Print Workshops.

If you'd like to take part in my artist interviews series then please do get in touch at claireleanneleach@gmail.com. 

If you enjoyed reading then please click the heart at the bottom, share or better still leave me a comment, I love reading them. ❤️

Artist Interview: Claire Cansick

I'm a curious type; I like to know what informs an artist. Who or what do they look to for inspiration? How do they work? Each month I will be asking an artist I admire a few questions, this month is Claire Cansick.

Gentleness Clears The Soul, 100cm x 150 cm, oil on canvas

Gentleness Clears The Soul, 100cm x 150 cm, oil on canvas

Claire, your work deals with landscape and the human form, what is it about these two very different subject matters that fascinates you?

I love to draw  and this was ignited when I was very young but when I began life drawing at art college I realised how much the figure interested me. There is an instinctive human connection that we feel when looking at figurative art and when I explore the figure in my work it is that I try to tap into. It is very much about looking inside myself and takes an immense amount of energy to produce. 

Landscape is almost the flip side of my work- looking out, connecting with the environment, feeling my presence as part of the whole. I practice meditation and this helps me cultivate the connection, be mindful of it. My landscapes have developed over time to an interest in the trees and woods around where I live, their diversity, atmosphere and colour.


Painting and drawing appear to be your favoured methods of creating, what do you love about painting in particular?

I have never been taught 'how to paint', as I concentrated on printmaking and drawing at art college, so there is a real element of experimentation involved- you could say I'm making it up as I go along! I really enjoy discovering ways to use oils and they are beautifully deep and rich to work with and provide the best depth of colour.

The Poachers, 76cm x 51cm, oil on canvas

The Poachers, 76cm x 51cm, oil on canvas

Trespassing For Art V, 90cm x 60cm, oil on canvas

Trespassing For Art V, 90cm x 60cm, oil on canvas

You are a member of The Arborealists, an artist collective who deal with trees and the landscape, do you find being in an artist group helpful?

Tim Craven - founder member of The Arborealists - is a wonderful advocate for art and conservation and is one of the most enthusiastic and inspiring people I've had the pleasure to work with. The group is so professional and works very hard providing opportunities to exhibit all around the UK and Europe. I find being a member exciting, rewarding and am so looking forward to the programme this year.


I adore the vibrancy in your paintings, is making work with a lot of colour important to you?

Colour really interests me, especially since reading Joseph Albers' 'Interaction Of Colour' and I use the landscapes in particular to explore it by using limited palettes to see what I can achieve. I tend to look for recessive colours which allows me to abstract whats in front of me and when looking at other painters work I like to try to to decipher technique and colour layering. 

Whenever, 40cm x 50cm, oil, ink and pencil on gessoed wood panel

Whenever, 40cm x 50cm, oil, ink and pencil on gessoed wood panel

You're based in Norfolk, how does the local area influence your landscape paintings?

There is a lot of open land in Norfolk and it is so typically English- fields lined with old oak trees smothered in ivy, copses and woods all over the place. I live opposite a small wood so I see it every day, changes in light and colours occur minute to minute and that is a big influence. My mother was raised in a very rural village and her enthusiasm and love for the countryside has been passed on to me. An artist friend and I often go on drawing jollies, go out in the car around Norfolk to wander, draw, take photos and warm up after with a pub lunch! And we visit galleries, we call it working!!

Trespassing For Art, 40cm x 30cm, pastel and pencil on painted paper

Trespassing For Art, 40cm x 30cm, pastel and pencil on painted paper

Cawston, 40cm x 30cm, pastel and pencil on paper

Cawston, 40cm x 30cm, pastel and pencil on paper

What artists (living or dead) inspire you?

Where do I start?! The list is so long and includes Victor Passmore, Milton Avery, Edvard Munch and Henri Matisse as some of the biggest influences for their use of colour, line and pure imagination. Contemporary painters include Billy Childish- who is one of my major influences, his work completely fascinates me and I also love his writing. Luke Hannam is another painter who is a relentless Instagrammer, incredibly prolific and imaginative and inspires me every day with his extensive exploration of ideas, wonderful drawings and love for art.

Tell me about your studio or creative space?

I work in an open plan studio space with 30 people with a massive array of creativity in the heart of Norwich. It is in the Norwich Lanes which is a wonderfully diverse area of independent businesses. The spaces are not enormous and there's no heating but I find going there allows me to switch off from other parts of my life and really immerse myself into my work. I wouldn't be without it.

I love learning random facts about people, tell me three things about yourself. 

  • I have three gorgeous children who are really encouraging and supportive of their slightly weird mother.
  • I'm fiercely loyal but I don't suffer fools!
  • I'm a ridiculous cat person, I have two maincoons and adore them, they often pop up on my instagram feed.

Finally, where can people follow your work online?

@clairecansick on Instagram
@clairecansick on Twitter
clairecansick.com

You can sign up for irregular emails at www.clairecansick.com/contact and I promise not to bombard your inbox!

Thank you to Claire for taking part in my artist interview series. I'm sure I'm not the only one that would like to join Claire and her artist friend on a 'drawing jolly' with a pub lunch included, that sounds like the best kind of day. Claire has several exhibitions coming up this year and also sells her work in her online shop. Please click the following links to learn more: Claire Cansick Exhibitions / Claire Cansick Online Shop. #clairesunite

If you'd like to take part in my artist interviews series then please do get in touch at claireleanneleach@gmail.com. 

If you enjoyed reading then please click the heart at the bottom, share or better still leave me a comment, I love reading them. ❤️

From The Road

While on my travels I was surrounded by inspiration. Landscapes took my breath away, hours upon hours on buses afforded me time to mull over my experiences and a few tiny sketches on postcards were all I had in place of a studio practice. I'm not a great artist/traveller. When I'm travelling I'm doing just that, making my way from place to place, seeing all there is to offer, zooming around the sights. Making work while away doesn't come easily to me and it didn't when I was on my last big trip either. I made some postcards and drew a couple of sketches but that was it, in eleven months my pen had hardly touched the paper. There just wasn't always time or space, when there was time I'd draw but it would take such a long time to finish one postcard that I wasn't left with much finished work. When I returned home I decided that I really wanted to create a body of work inspired by my big trip, I wanted to make drawings from the tiny postcards and use photographs from the journey as a starting point for new sketches. In order to fuel the project I booked a slot in a local gallery so that I'd have an end goal, a place where I could bring everything together and show just how inspiring the journey was. 

Pucon, Chile, 21cm x 14.9cm, pen on paper

Pucon, Chile, 21cm x 14.9cm, pen on paper

Twisted Trees in Tierra del Fuego, 21cm x 14.9cm, pen on paper

Twisted Trees in Tierra del Fuego, 21cm x 14.9cm, pen on paper

The exhibition will be called From The Road, a nod to Jack Kerouac's On The Road  which I read not long before setting off in September 2016. I am in the middle of creating work for the show at the moment, I have several drawings already made which can be viewed on my website here. In viewing the drawings in real life I hope the viewer will see the detail that I have attempted to capture and the overall impression of the landscape when you stand back. Each time I create a piece I am transported back to the place where it is inspired by, be it standing on top of a pass looking out over snowcapped mountains or in a forest surrounded by trees, mud and mist. If you are local to Hampshire then I'd love for you to see the show in person, details are on the poster below which was kindly put together by Bea at Sheep Shed Gallery.

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If you enjoyed reading then please click the heart at the bottom, share or better still leave me a comment, I love reading them. ❤️