Scratchboard artists of the world unite

Update to the new International Society of Scratchboard Artists. Our board which includes me as Vice President and six others from the USA and Canada is well underway with incorporation and organizing a show for next year which will be held in Austin, Texas which will include some of the finest scratchboard art in the world.

The International Society of Scratchboard Artists came about initially because we had noticed on many occasions artists commenting that the exhibitions they were entering work into had no category for our medium. When people asked organizers which category they should enter their scratchboards into, they would be told such things as ‘Works on Paper’ or ‘Drawing’. Sometimes we would be put in a ‘Multimedia’ category and some organizers have dared to tell us scratchboard might be better suited at craft shows without ever seeing our work or what scratchboard as a medium is capable of in the hands of good artists. Many members of the general public and artist communities alike have little knowledge of scratchboard.

We know it is a fine art medium and our desire to elevate it to that level in other people’s consciousnesses is one of the driving forces behind the formation of ISSA.

Other mediums have their own societies representing them but we never did, until now. We spent a lot of time bemoaning the fact that scratchboard as a fine art medium didn’t get the recognition it deserved. This will change with ISSA which has the goals of lifting the profile of scratchboard internationally, providing exhibitions for members to enter their art into, organizing workshops to get the message and teaching across to the art and general communities and providing an organization where scratchboard artists can feel like they aren’t isolated but can actually feel a sense of belonging to what is already a very large community worldwide.

Even without a society we already had members winning “best in show” and “people’s choice” awards and making great sales in some of the most prestigious art exhibitions in the world so with a society the future of scratchboard looks very bright indeed.

The founding board members of ISSA are Lorna Hannett from Canada, Sue Rhodes, Diana Lee, Cathy Sheeter, Sandra Willard and Ken MacFarlane from the US and Patrick Hedges from Australia.

So, if you are a scratchboard artist, or would like to try this medium, watch this space over the next few months.

Catch my work in Australian Fine Art and Decorative Painting Magazine

In the latest edition of Australian Fine Art and Decorative Painting magazine, I have a six page step by step demonstration of my Himba Maiden in scratchboard. If you are in Australia, grab an edition, it’s not expensive and a well printed magazine, it’s volume 18, number 11. If you are too far away, here’s a scan of the first page with the finished piece.

The Birdy Bunch

I never watched The Brady Bunch but it seems such an institution as far as tv series go so I thought I’d pay homage to it with some wacky characters from my travels. These are all emus who seem very strange birds indeed. They follow you around and look as if they are going to peck your eyes out, and I do believe they’ve done some damage to some people, but never to me. They are a bit rediculous with the looks they give you. I had the opportunity to rub the neck of one that wouldn’t leave me alone and was surprised to find how oily it felt.

Ok, so the first picture is called “The Birdy Bunch” and after that I’m posting an odd one out, “The Screamer”. The reality is it was just yawning, but it sure looks like it has something to yell at me.

“The Birdy Bunch” is a montage of nine individual scratchboards

And now for “The Screamer”

The Emu Tryptich

I finished my final emu for a tryptich. They are all scratchboard and all completed almost 100% with a fibreglass brush, and all done on black boards. They will also all be framed together. I had the plan that the one on the left would look feminine, the one on the right masculine (a ladies man as a friend says) and the one in the middle could be either/or. I also wanted the one in the middle to dominate and the others to direct the viewers attention to the middle.

Here’s the final one and then the tryptich below

Don’t peck my eyes out

Emus are amazing birds. They seem so inquisitive, come right up to you and always look like they are going to peck your eyes out. I solve this by hiding behind a camera lens, but then I’m worried about having a bill for hundreds of dollars to fix my lens. Anyway, it’s never happened yet but it is very unnerving when that large beak and huge eye is only a few inches away from your own face and staring straight at you. This is another small scratchboard to go with a previous one to eventually be a tryptich like below.