KIM-LEE KHO
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Collaboration Can Be Beautiful

12/11/2014

3 Comments

 
Responsive Collaboration collage/mixed media by Kim Lee Kho and Kal Honey, 2014. 7
Responsive Collaboration collage/mixed media by Kim Lee Kho and Kal Honey, 2014. 7" x 5", acrylic, watercolour paper, collaged paper, masking tape, plastic netting. [click on the image for a larger view.]
Both my husband Kal Honey and I are artists and art instructors. In our previous careers we worked together as designers and art directors, including running our own little design studio for many years.

Our friendship began many years ago at a publishing company where we began to collaborate regularly on design (marketing and editorial) projects. It worked. Our differences made for interesting results. We discussed our way through points of disagreement. Project by project, the process became increasingly organic (including the inevitable bumps in the road!).

Since switching our focus from design to visual art, we have always consulted each other, discussed problems and ideas, physically assisted in each other's projects. What we had not done was actually collaborate. 

Until now.

We're part of a small group of artists that meets several times a year. Our group connected up with another group and decided to do a responsive collage exchange. What that meant was one person made a collage then mailed it to a 

member of the other group, who then made one to the same size that responded in some way to the first collage. That person in turn mailed theirs to a third person (in the first group) who responded to the second collage, and so on.

Working responsively like that is a great way to give yourself a starting point and maybe discover something fresh in your own work. Collaboration is another whole layer of challenge. I'm not positive, but I think we were the only participants who did collaborate.

Collaboration is good strong medicine for control freaks! Mutual respect is key, as is loosening your grip (from controlling the work and from your own ego). Treating each other and what the other person 
Working responsively is a great way to give yourself a starting point and maybe discover something fresh in your own work. Collaboration is another whole layer of challenge and is good, strong medicine for control freaks!
does with the proper respect can require more thought than usual before speaking, as well as longer and deeper consideration of the other person's work than you would need for something you had done yourself.

For this collage, Kal and I started by taking turns at individual layers. Then things got interesting. It became a series of discussions with each intervention; longer discussion over smaller aspects as we got closer to completion. 

The piece borrows a little positional/proportional structure from the original collage we responded to, as well as some colour and material reference, but in the end it totally surprised us, and that made us very happy.

Have you done collaborative work? Was it an enjoyable process with an interesting result or did the collaboration itself need more work? Please share your stories in the comments.
3 Comments

Something New

12/3/2014

0 Comments

 
There is a new member in the 'Subject to Limitation' family: another one involving chain link fencing. I like the dramatic, moody colour palette, the contrast between the dimensional and the flat areas, the little surprise hits of colour, and if you look at the face and hair, you will also observe some value reversal (values = darks/lights). Ultimately though there is an emotional quality – supported by all those things I listed – that persuaded me this was a keeper. The final physical size(s) and format(s) have yet to be decided.

[Click on the image to see it larger.]
Untitled (Chainlink red/violet) by Kim Lee Kho, Digital, 2014
Untitled (Chainlink red/violet) by Kim Lee Kho, Digital, 2014
0 Comments

    Kim-Lee Kho

    As a visual artist I like nothing more than getting up to my elbows in paint or little plastic toys, or wading in at the deep end in pursuit of an idea. When I am not teaching others in a similar vein, you can find me researching, writing and noodling around in my studio, seeing where my latest lines of inquiry lead me.

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    All images and content on this website © Kim-Lee Kho 2005–2018 except as indicated. All rights reserved. No reproduction without express, written permission.
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  • Home
  • Gallery
    • Burnt Offerings (2022) >
      • Sponsors: Thank you
    • My Father's Things (series)
    • Heartspace
    • A Full Heart
    • Subject to Limitation >
      • Boxed In
      • Expanding Media
      • Fences as Barriers
      • Containment
    • Skin
    • Face[t]s
    • [Un]Settled
    • Digital / Photo / Mixed
    • Painting
    • To See More
  • Shop
    • Interior Life series
    • Trees + Hidden Complexity
    • A Full Heart series
  • Courses & Events
    • Current + Upcoming
    • Virtual Studio Parties
    • Gallery Walk & Talks
    • Testimonials
  • Blog
    • News Archive
  • ABOUT
    • Biography
    • Statement
    • CV
    • Publications/Media
  • Contact