Friday 18 May 2012

Assessment Show!

These are the pieces from the project I am showing in my final show. They are far removed from the experiments relating to skin I had conducted. I have changed my project completely since then. I no longer am doing it on that topic but rather on the figure in general.  I needed to broaden my project in order to be better able to gain ideas and produce work less stifled by concept. So I did.



The work above was inspired by a series of photographs I had manipulated. I found a folder of old family photographs that belonged to my grandmother. They must have been taken around five or six decades ago. Most were monochrome but there was the odd colour one. I had the strange and unaccounted for idea of using pixilation on them. An image of a person on the television who had their head censored spurned this. I used Photoshop to achieve the effects. I did many of them and used many different and intriguing effects. 




You may ask how did this inspire them as they seem to have no relation. An image of a blond child disrupted by pixilation conveyed to me the idea of everything being divided into cells - as in a grid. So I got a piece of material that was structured in a grid format and applied paint on it and made numerous prints. The one above was the most successful. I love the manner in which the colour tone changes from left to right. It seems to vibrate against the lifeless black background. I also like how it refused to print in certain areas for some reason - this was perhaps due to ineffective application of paint. 

I was also working on gesture drawings during the same period. I wanted to make my drawing style a little loser and less formal and strict. I wanted to only draw the basics and suggest an item using as less lines as is possible. I wanted more vitality and expression in my draughtsmanship. I decided to combine  both the grid and these loose lines to make the following works. I became entranced by using paint in strange and outlandish ways. I love using the card to remove it, leaving a faint hint of what was once an opaque stroke. I liked taking something so definite and measured like a grid and dragging paint across it. It completely obliterates the stern power it would have had I had left it as it was originally printed.

Tuesday 8 May 2012

Skin!


Originally my project was going to deal with the relationship between colour and how this can be used to describe and convey human emotions and thinking. However, I found this was extremely difficult to get ideas from so I have decided to change to looking at the human being in a different manner. I have decided to look at skin and how this translates to paint. I am interested in how human beings approach skin and view it. This is an experiment I did. I mixed paint with toothpaste and it created a lovely consistency. I used toothpaste because it is a cleaning product. It is used to clean teeth and refers to the cleaning of the body and how we have such a preoccupation with it. I wanted to combine both concept and medium without being pretentious or overt about it.



This is just latex poured on top of it. I was trying to recreate the texture of skin and perhaps the appearance. Not sure if it is entirely successful but it is rather interesting none the less. 



This was made by applying a layer of PVA on a sheet of white card. I then applying toilet roll and a further layer of PVA. Then, using a strong piece of plastic card, I stretched blobs of paint across it. I really like affect and how the paint mixes with the PVA. However, if you do too much work it can cause the toilet roll to combine with both mediums and it all becomes a repulsive mess. Restraint is key.
I was interested in recreating the look of stretch marks but in a very free and abstract manner. I don’t want to necessarily recreate a photograph. That would be rather pointless to me at the moment. It serves no purpose in the context of my project. 

Wednesday 25 April 2012

Identifying Subject Matter!


We have begun a project on identifying subject matter. We had to collect some images to appropriate and use them as tools to help us along the way. The images I gathered were all very mysterious and emotive and dealt with the human condition. I realised after that they are all dealing with the figure. Two are from Andy Warhol’s very famous Screen Tests.





The two images above were taken by a famous spirit photographer William H. Mumler. Whether they are a hoax or not is unimportant. They are very special and unique documents.


Albrecht Dürer

Portrait of Oswolt Krel

1499






Friday 13 April 2012

Painterly Studies!


I made so many of these little painterly studies yesterday. The method is very simple but effective. I painted on laminating sheets and then placed paper on top. I allied pressure to it and then ripped it off slowly. This is very similar to printing. I really like how I can create marks that I could not normally create with a brush or any other instrument. I act of transferring and pulling can only do this. It is evident that  I have paid a lot of attention to my mark making as of late. I am always searching for new ways to create unusual smears and smudges. What I find with these pieces is that at first I may hate them. However, when I look at them hours or days later I might love them. This has taught me not too throw studies away so easily. It was a terrible habit. It is far better to leave them for a few days to see if I have a change of heart or to see what I can salvage from the mess. I learned that I could hate 90% of a picture I make but if the 10% is brilliant or worthy of note then it deserves to survive.



I adore the manner in which the orange paint seems to vibrate against the bright pink background. It creates a great visual effect.  It is perhaps what Bridget Riley might create if she was more painterly and expressionistic. 




I feel this is my most successful one. I love how the use of paint is invigorated by using a plain, unfussy background. Simplicity is best. In fact, I read a great book this week that informed me that drawing is simply the act of simplifying. This is a statement that is so true and yet I have never discovered it for myself or had it revealed to me in all my years of sketching. Must not be paying enough attention to what I’m doing!




Some paint I used was made very liquid. This caused it to stain the paper instead of simply sit on top of it. When this is combined with opaque and dramatic strokes it can create a three-dimensional affect. It is also similar to the effect the bleach has.

Wednesday 4 April 2012

Bleach and lots of it!



Here are some experiments I have done using bleach on sensitive paper. My tutors saw an old sketchbooks of similar experiments I had done in first semester and suggested I bring those into this project.  I decided I focus on how I apply the bleach so as to take an approach that is distinct from that used subsequently in October to December. I had dripped it on paper strewn on a floor previously. I decided to spray it on paper hanging on a wall to see what affect it would have. I also layered sheets on top of each other on the ground and sprayed a large amount and watched it soak through. This created faint and ghostly blotches on each sheet. It has the effect of splashes of water or a wave lushly rolling upon the sand on a beach. I like how understated they are.





Friday 30 March 2012

Progress!


I’m afraid I haven’t a picture of the first piece I produced as my camera is broke. It was inspired by the pictures of the slanted bank of the canal. The white stains on it really captured my attention.  I decided to paint on a completely smooth surface. I am accustomed to painting on canvas which has a grain. I decided a black bin bag would be suitable. I was enraptured by the way the paint falls, drips and rolls down it. I make the paint especially watery and liquid and applied it using a sponge. This proved great as it allowed me to pull and drag the tainted white in alien ways to me.


These are two experiments that I feel have great possibilities. The one on the left was made using toilet roll and latex. I dipped the toilet roll in latex and layered it. I was excited by how the latex changes colour significantly once it has dried. It has a coarse, rough feel which is interesting. The one on the right was made using Styrofoam, silver spray paint and cardboard. I attached the Styrofoam to the brown cardboard and sprayed. The spray paint dissolves the Styrofoam and creates an effect as seen in the photo. I love the way you can control the result by how much you spray and how lightly or heavily you do so. I also like the smooth texture it creates. 




I applied latex over it later. It gave something that seemed very industrial and synthetic a rather natural appearance. It looks rather disgusting.



This was made using salt, red ink and latex and water. I mixed a tiny drop of red ink with the salt and placed it on cardboard. I then dripped latex over it. It doesn’t really apply to any of the photographs I had taken. I am fascinated with latex and am just going crazy looking at ways to manipulate it. I love how all these experiments are turning out abstract. I am normally rather figurative so this is a complete revelation. 



I glued strands of a black bin bag to cardboard and placed latex on it. Then I ripped it off days later. I love how it keeps it shape. I love how the latex would suggest different things to different people. I also like how when light reflects of the black bag it creates a light blue sheen. Its rather poetic. 


I made this by mixing random paints in a pot with offshoots of straw from a bail at home in my shed. I didn’t like the effect it had on its own so I applied latex over. It doesn’t look necessarily great but it is interesting to touch. I am really getting interested in making things people can touch. Normally people are not allowed touch paintings. Feeling something is a great way of seeing it in a more informed and perhaps unusual way. 

Saturday 24 March 2012

Painting Project!

I am delighted I got into Painting. All the stress and nervousness I felt beforehand was uncalled for. We have started a project that deals with materials and artistic processes. I am really excited to do it. It will allow for some experimentation and I am hoping I can finally focus on something besides concept or narrative. I find that sometimes too much emphasis is placed on this and craft is left out in the cold. I have collected a group of photographs to work from and use as a springboard for ideas. I would of usually waited until the weekend to do this at home. It is there that I believe I would find more exciting imagery. However, since I only had a few days to do this I decided to take a walk around Grove Island to see what I could find. I took a lot of photographs of the rugged bark of trees and the slimy banks of the adjacent canal. I cannot wait to see how these will translate into paint. Here are some samples: