I think this is my favorite of the figure drawings so far. I prefer this one both because of the composition and for the figure's sculptural quality that I think is captured better than in some of my other drawings. I am still, however, finding hands, face, and feet frustrating. Only two more in-class drawing periods for this unit..hopefully I can improve in that time!
Monday, November 29, 2010
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Belle Isle
I got some great photography in this weekend (finally!). Today I went just across the James River to Belle Isle with my friends Grace, Alex, and Rellie. We spent a beautiful day walking in the woods on some trails we found, finding remnants of abandoned buildings, and best of all--taking lots of pictures! Here are a few from the day :)
It feels so good to take some pictures again! I haven't been shooting nearly enough since I got to school. Hooray for this weekend!
Madeline
Meet my beautiful suite mate Maddy! Over the weekend she let me do a little photo shoot with her..here are a few shots from it. I love doing shoots like this with people (my friends can attest). If you ever want some pictures, let me know!
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Pinpression
Do you remember this toy from the late 80s/ early 90s? In my space research class a few weeks ago we looked at the work of some sculptors: Claes Oldenburg, Michael Rakowitz, Louise Bourgeios, Annette Messeger. Using the inspiration of Claes Oldenburg's soft sculptures in particular, we were assigned to find a relatively small, hard object, and recreate it as a large-scale soft sculpture. Originally I bought a bunch of silver sateen fabric intending to scale-up a screw. When I brought my fabric into class to begin working, another student in my class brought it to my attention that he was planning on making a screw as well. I'm so glad he was too, because otherwise I may have not been inspired to think of a new, more exciting object to make. I had been feeling underwhelmed by the idea of making a giant screw but hadn't found a more suitable object to recreate. After brainstorming though I decided I wanted to challenge myself and make a giant Pin Art board!
For those of you that haven't gotten to play with one before, a Pin Art or Pinpression board (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pin_Art) is a toy made of many nails or pins that can slide back and forth through small holes in a rectangle of plastic to create a relief sculpture of your hand, face, or whatever else you may press into the pins.
The finished piece is 3' x 4' and there are 432 2" inch "pins." 212 of those are 3D soft pin sculptures and the remaining 220 are circles of fabric, meant to represent the pins that were not moved with the hand pressed the toy. Each flat pin head circle was hand cut. Each pin was created by machine sewing a tube of fabric, hand sewing a pin head circle to a circular cotton make-up remover pad (so the heads would retain the shape of a flat pin head), and hand sewing the two pieces together. Then, each pin was stuffed with batting.
For the backing I stretched a piece of black cotton over a scrap piece of plywood. The flat head circles were then hot glued onto the black cloth. To attach the 3D screws I had to hand-saw 212 stumps from thick wood dowels, stick the stumps in the tubes, hot glue the stumps in place, and then finally hot glue the bottoms of the stumps to the board. I made a grid and planned out which of the 432 2" spots would be flat and which would be 3D to make up the hand. After everything was secured on the board I hand cut 6 pieces of scrap PVC pipe and glued them down. Then I found and sized a scrap piece of plexiglass to place on top of the pipe pieces.
The most challenging part of this project was handling the mass number of pieces that went into its production. The final assembly could not happen until every piece was ready to go so, with over a thousand pieces to prepare by hand, there was a lot of work to put together at the very end. I am so happy this piece is finished!! SO MUCH time but it was worth it in the end. Plus, my professor chose my piece to be on display in the Art Foundation building hallway, along with 3 other pieces from my class!
Figure drawing encore
I am more satisfied with today's drawing than the previous one. I hadn't yet focused on a face in my drawings so instead of depicting her from the front or in full view I decided to crop it as a profile bust yet keeping the hand in there because I needed practice drawing hands as well. I'm pleased with how the face turned out. I tried to include all of the nuances I could capture. The hand was worked for a good while as well; it was difficult to proportion the different sections correctly. I think it is not 100% accurate yet but it's surely closer than the hand in the previous drawing.
I'm considering going back and filling in the chair with more detail..thoughts?
Figure drawing
What a strange angle from which to draw someone. The ankles were terribly frustrating in this drawing. If I get up the courage I may revisit this one soon to fix the sketches that stand as ankles currently. ANKLES ANKLES ANKLES! Try drawing an ankle sometime so you understand.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)