Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Photography Final Project. "What came first?" A photo series.

Here's the final project I did for my photography class. It's a 6 window mat, bevel cutted, with 6 square prints. The series reflects on the age old parodical question, "Which came first? The chicken? Or the egg?"








Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Anne Frank Memorial Observation

1) I see a memorial, in the form of concrete seating, walls with inscriptions, and a concrete set similar to an attic. In the center is a bronze statue of Anne looking out of a window.

2) The concrete walls, door, and frame all frame in this representation of an attic, where Anne lived out a huge portion of her life due to Nazi conflict in Germany.

3) Probably the bronze sculpture, because its very dominant in the center and it's in the form of a human, which we tend to look toward.

4) I don't think the memorial is site specific, because Boise, Idaho doesn't hold much significance to the Holocaust.

5) The Idaho Human Rights Education center created and designed the memorial with funding from private donors.

6) Bronze, trees, grass, concrete, water

7) The text on the wall follows in a certain pattern which functions as to where your eye should follow.

8) I think the intended meaning of the text is to guide you through the memorial.

9) Very successful, it ignites a passion for human rights and gives an interactive element to stepping into this representation of the attic that Anne lived in.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

I carved this beauty of soap... SOAP! THE KIND YOU RUB YOUR BUTT WITH!!



Here is my soap sculpture. It's almost ready for judging tomorrow. I just have to build a base. I think I'm going to use film negatives to sit it on. I'm just going to add some texture and smooth out the bottom.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Book Sculpture Ships and Artist Statement

Not once have I had an art project progress that way that this one has. I knew right away
that I wanted to some kind of paper objects, made from pages of books, but deciding what was rather difficult. First, I made a castle, then a windmill, then a lighthouse, then finally my ships. Each object has something in common though, they are each a fantasy that the pages of a popular fiction book often depict.

For this project I wanted to take that fantasy and make it tangible, viewable, and put it in reference to the books that contain it. Instead of reading about the journey of these ships, your watching them, cannons raised high, deciding in your mind who is captain, whose going to win the battle, or even if there is going to be a battle at all. I've made the fantasy more accessible to the consumer.





Tuesday, March 15, 2011

The Many Faces of my Book Art

In class, I've made a lighthouse and a castle. At home, I sculpted a windmill... all made out of pages from the books I've collected. I'm having trouble putting this one together, because none of them seem to serve the purpose I want to.

I think my problem is that I'm creating structural objects, instead of living, moving objects that have a sense of adventure. Because of this, I'm going to attempt to build giant ships. Two of em.

They might even battle.

Focus on the Artist: M.L. Van Nice


M. L. Van Nice is another book artist that alters the book to create sculpture and meaning. His piece I included above titled "Swiss Army Book" is intricate, complicated, with lots of meaning. He's got the book serving a much bigger purpose than just to contain words and pages.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Focus on the Artist: Brian Dettmer


Brian Dettmer is a book artist, who creates amazing sculpture pieces out of books and pages. His work reminds me of Tom Friedmans in a way because of the obsession that goes into each one. They are extremely intricate and confusing, but are very, very beautiful and crazy. Here are a couple examples that I highly recommend viewing larger to see all the crazy.

The more I see about book art, the more I understand why it's it's own genre of art. The book is beautiful and represents so many differing things to many different people. Art is all about meaning, so naturally art created out of books makes sense.



Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Focus on the Artist: Diane Cassidy

Diane Cassidy is a book artist I discovered on bayareabooks.com. She creates typical bound books, with some pretty extraordinary things. She does Jacob Ladder's books, books from chocolate wrappers, and more. I found her work to be really well done. She has amazing craft, and great ideas in keeping each one unique and inspiring.



Monday, March 7, 2011

Focus on the Artists: Janine Antoni


Janine Antoni, like Yoko Ono, used performance art using her entire body including hair, brain, arms, and legs. She is a contemporary artist who, through her performance, made people think, analyze, and ask questions.

I think its' really great that she puts herself into her art. One piece I read she did, she slept while a machine tracked her sleep. Then while she was awake, she sewed a blanket with  the guide from the EEG machine. She did this for eight days! Crazy, but really cool.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Focus on the Artists: RTmark


RTmark helped artists who had oppositions with giant corporations and other big business vs. the man type of narratives. It served as a website where people would vote on what they should do by providing the funding.

One piece they did, was replace the voice boxes in Barbies with G.I. Joes so that the G.I. Joes talked like girls, and the Barbies talked like men. I thought it was a good statement of how we expose our children to cliches. Men do it this way. Women do it this way. It's not always the case.


Saturday, March 5, 2011

Castle Book Sculpture

Going along with a theme of lighthouses, I constructed a good-sized castle structure out of a book.


By the way, I bought a huge stack of books at the thrift store. All for a book. I tried only books with nice old pages, and big thick hard covers.




Friday, March 4, 2011

Focus on the Artist: Yoko Ono



Yoko Ono is a very popular conceptual artist who defined the genre even further. She performed lots of performance art, and displayed installations that put the viewer into the art. Some viewers would have to climb ladders all the way up to the ceiling jus to see the piece.


Another piece she performed was a performance piece where the viewer took turns cutting pieces of her clothing off. It had a striking narrative of how we treat women, how women allow themselves to be treated, and was both difficult and entrancing to watch.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Book Sculpture Brainstorm Sketches

Started my next art project today. We're doing book sculpture, which, to me, sounds kind of open ended. I like the idea of objects coming out of an open book. Maybe illuminated with flickering lights or even movement if that's possible.

I like the image of a lighthouse, being illuminated with the text from the book pages coming through.

Here's a couple of preliminary sketches.



Friday, February 25, 2011

Window Mat for Photography

Finished my second print and my first window mat for photography. It was somewhat stressful, cutting the mat only a few hours before class started, but I got the job done pretty nicely.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Beef Cow Sculpture and Artist Statement

For my transformation project, I was inspired by Tom Friedman, an artist who made a sculpture of himself completely out of sugar cubes. I was inspired by the simplicity of the cubes, and the obsession that went into it's creation. I've created a small sculpture of a cow, out of beef bouillon cubes.

I think the sculpture makes a statement to American crippling food industry. A beef cube is composed almost entire of salt, with added beef "flavor". No beef is involved, so it's not surprising that no one associated them with beef, cow, or meat for that matter. Also, it's made from 189 cubes, if your curious.






RUNNING TOTAL: 189 cubes.

I had a slight accident with the head, which decided to fall off overnight. I had to apply much more glue to its neck line than I wanted, but it's staying. Not going to get much on craft because of that aspect I think. The cubes have started sucking in all the moisture in the air and are getting soft and crumbling. Therefore I'm applying heavy amounts of hot glue to keep it sturdy.

Words to describe it now would be:
  • ironic
  • brown
  • cubist
  • large
  • heavy
  • dense
  • smelly
  • SMELLY
  • SMEEELLLLYYY
  • gross
  • decaying
  • structure


Saturday, February 19, 2011

Cubist Cow Sketch

Here's a couple sketches of the cow I'm working on. Needs some work in the area of the udders, but pretty good proportions if I do say so myself.

Almost finished. Pics coming soon.



Friday, February 18, 2011

Focus on the Artist: Marcel Duchamp



Marcel Duchamp completely revolutionized the way we view, question, and create art. By placing a urinal on a pedestal and calling it a fountain, he began this idea of conceptualization that had never been seen before. People began to question art, "What is art?""Is there rules for art" "Is art so because it is created by an artist?" "Who determines who an artist is?"



All these are amazing questions that stemmed from this one piece, which began a revolution in the conceptual art genre.