Able Parris describes himself as “a hard-working collage artist, designer & lover of type married to photographer Julia Parris.” Parris designs for the marketing company McKinney and is also an active contributor to Field Mic and We Love Typography.
Able Parris has been creating collages since around the age of 23 & prefers to use materials from the 1960′s-90′s, especially images from the 70′s and 80′s; National Geographic magazines, animal illustrations, and any sort of text. As he explained in an interview with Artery Magazine, “I can’t get too old because the 1960’s and prior is too grainy. When you scan and enlarge, it gets distorted but not in a pretty distorted way, it kind of just looks bad because the printing quality wasn’t great, I don’t use newsprint either.”
In the same interview, Parris shares his thoughts on the collaging process. “Collage is difficult because it’s not like illustration where you can say ‘This needs an octopus so I’ll just draw one in.’ You have to have these things already that work together – or that may not work together at all, but you have to make it look like they were meant to be together and make sense,” he told Artery Magazine.
Able Parris attended Rhode Island College and the Rhode Island School of Design, however was unable to finish (“Why does art school have to cost so much?!“).
If you’d like to know more about Able Parris,
you might try watching
Canaca: The Fictional Story of Able Parris
For more “factual” information,
we also recommend you read
these interviews with Able Parris
Artery Magazine
NotPaper
Newfangled
Be sure to visit Able Parris‘ online gallery
http://work.ableparris.com/
and follow him on both
Twitter & Tumblr
Similar Posts:
- Art Spread: Bristles & Nibbs, the art of Brian Weaver
- Eduardo Recife: Misprinted Type
- David Caspar: The Secret Window
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
Tags: Able, able parris, animal illustrations, anticipation, Art, art school, artery magazine, artist, artwork, blind towards beauty, bravery, canaca, cardinal, changing imagination, Collage, Collages, collaging, collaging process, contributor, Design, designer, feeling faces, fictional story, fictional story of able parris, Field Mix, interview, interviews, Julia, Julia Parris, materials, McKinney, national geographic, newfangled, not paper, notpaper, Parris, peek a boo henry, photographer, rhode island college, rhode island school of design, Text, the future is bright, tumblr, twitter, type, typography, We Love Typography
































































[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Charlotte, PaperStreet Supplies. PaperStreet Supplies said: The Changing Imagination: Collages by Able Parris ~( @ableparris )~ –> http://cli.gs/AD54N <– ~[ #art #collage ]~ [...]