Karl Martens Watercolor Birds

Karl Martens Watercolor Birds

 

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The minute I laid eyes on Karl Martens’ art, I went to work to find out more about him.

In this video Karl Martens talks to Cathy Sayers about his work and his forthcoming exhibition ‘All of a Feather II’ at Cricket Fine Art, Chelsea, London from 29th October – 9th November 2013. Enjoy!

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A quest for the unexpected

Shih-t’ao (Chinese, 1642-1707) maintained that the artist needs to trust his or her own ability. Being receptive to impressions is more important than knowledge. In other words, the artist needs to be in touch with intuition.

In painting and calligraphy, the first stroke is the most important. It comes from nothing and manifests something. This is what Shih-t’ao calls the Holistic Brushstroke. It creates something where nothing was. Optimally, it contains no planned thought. It emanates from “emptiness”.

My struggle is to apply this to my painting, just as struggle to apply it when practicing Sho do (character calligraphy) or Zen Calligraphy (non-figurative, emotional calligraphic painting). The best results are achieved when no thought is given to it – when the mind rests and intuition takes over – Mu shin. Another aspect is to try accept what is, and not try to adjust it.

The true Holistic Brushstroke also describes a “method without method”. A way of achieving without intention. Doing through non-doing which, in Zen Calligraphy, is the most important aspect. This can also be said to be true in Kyudo (The way of the bow – Japanese archery). In Kyudo we try not to think of hitting the target. This is extremely difficult, but also the only way to hit it properly. Practicing Kyudo therefore is a complement to my painting and calligraphy. It helps me to train awareness of body, mind and bow and/or brush. It also helps me to disregard the goal and stay aware of the brush strokes, trusting my intuition to lead my brushstrokes. The few times I truly achieve this, the result always ends up surprising me.

Just as the union of calligraphy ink and paper always provides unexpected results, so does the watercolor on this rough hand made paper. Especially when calligraphy brushes are used. Each paper reacts differently to the medium. Sometimes it absorbs immediately, and other times it doesn’t absorb at all. A simple brush provides less control than fine one, and sometimes the opposite is true. This uncertainty is what inspires me. What will happen this time? In order to give life to some areas I sometimes use salt on the paper, which creates unexpected patterns as the paint dries. All in order to confront the unexpected.

Karl Mårtens

 

I hope you found some inspiration in Karl Martens painting technique. I personally love how large his paintings are and how loose he paints using large brush strokes.

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