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Artwork



Collage Journeys

Reviewer: Alyice Edrich

Art Book

magazine

Collage Journeys

Author

Jane Davies

Review

This review is a long time coming, and I feel a little guilty for not sharing this wonderful book with you sooner, but I’ve been trying to find the right words to convey what a freeing and inspirational book this is.

Collage Journeys isn’t a book about exploring or expressing your emotions through art, it doesn’t tell you how to use art to release pent up emotions or to explore what emotions surface on a daily basis. Rather, this is a book of projects and techniques that allow you to create art that is personal and true. This is a book that gets back to the basics of creating art.

“Collage is all about taking imagery and materials out of their original contexts or circumstances,” says Davies, “and putting them in new ones…giving them new life.”/

Collage, according to Davies, isn’t always a black and white process in which we begin with one idea and end with the same idea. Collage is about a process, a journey. It’s about beginning with one idea and allowing that idea to naturally evolve—even if it means a new meaning takes its place.

“At some point along the journey your collage will reveal meaning, seemingly of its own accord,” says Davies. “At other points, you will nudge it along by making conscious choices about the direction of the journey... The process is a balance of letting things happen and making things happen, just like life.”

“The more you work, the more you develop your own tastes and obsessions,
and a kind of personal iconography emerges.”

In 7 chapters and 143 pages, you’ll discover:

You’ll also have fun with the 19 detailed how-to projects:

  1. Daily life Collage
  2. Doodle Collage
  3. One Object, Ten Collages
  4. Artist Trading Cards
  5. Idea List Collage
  6. Collage A Day
  7. Scanner Collage
  8. Color Collage
  9. Tissue Paper Collage
  10. Cut Paper Collage
  11. Collage Enlargement
  12. Tissue Paper and Paint Layering
  13. Text As A Visual Element
  14. Narrative From Text
  15. Found Text
  16. Playing With Context
  17. Simple Visual Metaphor
  18. Personal Iconography
  19. Make A Journal

Most of the collages (and projects) introduced in this book are abstract in nature which makes the idea of creating a collage less intimidating and far easier for those of us who are just stretching our artistic talents or who can’t draw worth a lick.

But that doesn’t mean you have to stick to creating abstract collages. You can use the techniques and projects, in this book, to create collage art that fits your own personal tastes and style because everything taught in this book is transferable from one genre to the next. It’s all about exploration.

If you’re ready to give collage art a try, I highly suggest you grab a copy of Collage Journeys today.

Order Collage Journeys Today!

Disclosure: The reviewer received a complimentary copy of the book to review.



author bio

For reprint rights, comments, and/or questions about this article, please contact the author directly. It cannot be re-printed, or used elsewhere, without permission.

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