Medium a Month: Smoke

Filthy soot marks or the ephemeral touch of a flame? Explore art made from smoke

One way to cultivate creativity is to make art from the mundane. There is tremendous freedom in experimenting with a range of common everyday objects without any preconceived notions. Simply handle the media and reflect on, and then play up, its inherent characteristics. This month’s medium is smoke—and its sooty residue.

Smoke is both a rare and an ancient medium. While it was incorporated into ancient cave paintings, you don’t find a lot of examples of art made from smoke and that may be why the work you do find looks radically different. Each of the artists below found their own unique process through individual experimentation. Sometimes the smoke is gently guided, other times it is tightly controlled. Sometimes it is built up layer by layer, other times a subtractive process is used to reveal an image. Some artists leverage its metaphorical or historical significance, while other artists focus on its physical characteristics. In addition to images of the art, there is considerable video footage of these unique techniques in action. Combined, these works will make you see smoke in a new light.

Decorative Techniques

Smoke Painting

  • In this video, Kiril Uzonov’s discusses how his smoke painting techniques were inspired by primitive cave painting that combined soot and pigment.
  • In the 1930s, Wolfgang Paalen popularized fumage paintings which incorporated smoke patterns and pigment. This technique was adopted by other Surrealists as well.
  • This David Boyd video discusses the happy accidents that inspired his smoke paintings and shows his unique technique.
  • Sheila Gallagher’s contemporary smoke paintings explore how, as a medium, smoke can accentuate the sacred and the ephemeral. This video shows how Gallagher uses labor-intensive techniques and stencils to harness and concentrate smoke stains
  • Rob Tarbell’s Smoke Screen portraits leverage both the metaphorical nature and innate characteristics of smoke
  • Jim Dingilian’s smoke drawings inside bottles use a unique subtractive process to color with carbon.
  • Michael Fennel uses layers of carbon residue to create detailed smoke portraits. This video discusses how Fennel taps smoke’s expressive potential.
  • Steve Spazuk takes fumage painting to a whole new level. Access the gallery tab on the top of this page. This video shows how he harnesses all the techniques above and then some.
  • Xiao Zhu projects images of crying and coughing children onto factory smoke to illustrate the dangers of air pollution.

Smoke Photography

fire-paintings-soot-art-steve-spazuk-41-870x870

“Ornithocide” is Spazuk’s most recent collection of soot paintings. It is a disturbing series featuring live and dead birds juxtaposed with various manmade devices designed to kill insects. Since this industrial revolution, we are quite comfortable with the idea that we can poison insects to seemingly cleanse our homes and protect our crops. We collectively and conveniently avoid thinking about the impacts of these suicidal choices. How can it make sense to lace our food and dwellings with poisons? How dare we impose these deadly choices on all other forms of life? Like the classic “canary in the coal mine”, Spazuk reflects on the shocking population decline of insectivorous birds as a clear warning to humans that these toxins are making their way through the food chains and the natural cycles. Like a dark mirror, the death of millions of birds forces us to see the threat we pose to the planet and all living systems, including ourselves.
— Steve Spazuk, statement from his website May, 2015.

Sheila Gallagher's Blue Flocked Virgin Mary Bank, smoke on canvasSheila Gallagher's Buddha Candle, smoke on canvas (2012)

One of the reasons I like working with smoke is that it’s totally crazy and chaotic. You can mine it for all of its metaphors: a sort of ephemerality, intangibility, transience. It’s the stuff of ritual, it’s violent, and it’s uncontrollable. It’s visible but immaterial, and there’s not that much stuff on earth which is visible yet immaterial.
— Sheila Gallagher, in an interview with Matthew Nash

Rob Tarbell's " Ann Karma Fala on Elephant"Rob Tarbell's " Flying Alinga Double Jump" Rob Tarbell's " Flying Alinga Balancing Ring"

The circus animal and performer imagery in the Smoke Rings series parallels the smoke process. The trainer must recognize and respect the innate nature of an animal when trying to modify its behavior to achieve a desired outcome: e.g. training a bear to dance or training a horse to walk upright. The same is true in working with smoke. The inherent properties of smoke must be respected, then permitted to – and discouraged from – acting naturally.
— Rob Tarbell, from his web site

jim dingilian 1jim dingilian 3jim dingilian 2

The miniature scenes I depict are of locations on the edge of suburbia which seem mysterious or even slightly menacing despite their commonplace nature. The bottles add to the implied narratives of transgression. When found by the sides of roads or in the weeds near the edges of parking lots, empty liquor bottles are artifacts of consumption, delight, or dread. As art objects, they become hourglasses of sorts, their drained interiors now inhabited by dim memories.
— Jim Dingilian, see the Aron Packer Gallery

xiao zhu 1xiao zhu 2

Clean the air. Let the future breathe again.
— Xiao Zhu, a Chinese company dedicated to providing clean air to its citizens. Their video.

Share your links to other smoke art and I will add them to the list. Or, add to the discussion by sharing images of your students’ smoke explorations.

NOTE: As the teacher, you will need to consider the benefits of when you share works by established artists. When shown early in the process they can get the creative juices flowing, but they can also lead to self-censoring. Remember, the goal is not to create portfolio-worthy pieces, though that may happen. The goal is to practice thinking expansively and to become more artistically fluent, agile, and responsive.

Please share if you know others who create art made from smoke.

2 Comments

  1. Jenny
    Jenny December 27, 2014 at 2:56 am .

    love the concepts and approaches. Pondering the “permanence” issue… Recalling my art professors telling me I could not major in “Drawing” because that’s not considered a permanent medium. Drawing with smoke but–how to lock it down permanently? Fascinating! (One stuffy painting prof dismissed all my weekly studio efforts with a disparaging “huff” during class reviews and I got so infuriated one time that I went back to my studio and lit my most recent “huff” painting on fire. The whole thing warped, melted, and then cooled to a perfect representation of my wrath. When I brought it in for class review, her face ignited like the flames that reconfigured my painting–she…was…TRANSFIXED! She LOVED IT. Which was wonderful, comical, and completely maddening all at once.)

    1. Charles McQuillen
      Charles McQuillen December 27, 2014 at 4:58 pm .

      On his website Michael Fennel discusses his experimentation with fixatives and suggests he has figured it out. I personally like the immediacy of impermanent art. Your “huff” painting story made me think of a different Sheila Gallagher series. In addition to smoke paintings she has been cooking plastic paintings on the grill. Check out this video on how she taps into the accidents that occur when fire is part of your process.

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