Showing posts with label byu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label byu. Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2012

sculpture & 3d design.

sculpture: 

bronze casting: Imaginary (Un)it
bronze, liver of sulfur patina.

stone carving: [dis]Appear
alabaster. 

steel fabrication: The Roots of the Mountain (Reflection)
steel, white rustoleum spray paint. 

3d design:

formalism: Wanderlust
steel, black rustoleum spray paint. 



environmental space: Imagined Landscape
google sketch-up. 
{the "box" would be filled with chalk allowing the audience to participate and draw/describe their own imagined landscape on the black pyramids which would be covered in chalkboard paint}

ephemera: Gather
objects collected from utah lake.


there is a lot i could say about each of these, but i will spare you from going into too much detail. just know that these classes were a pain for me. especially that large steel piece (Wanderlust). that one took me so much time i don't even want to think about it. but i never have to weld again. thank goodness. {there is also another wood piece that i forgot to take a picture of before i left utah. whoops}.

ps-
{i slept in until 2:30pm one day this week. see if you can top that! doubt it}.
enjoy your summer! i know i am. 


Thursday, March 15, 2012

descriptive lines + fleeting and not-so-fleeting impressions.

look what i made today! silk screen prints on a t-shirt and a tote! i'm pretty happy about it. i am kinda a lot obsessed with triangles right now. {the tote got crayon on it unfortuantely, so that's why is looks a little dirty. anddd the middle section of the line didn't come out all the way. third time's a charm}.
{machine used: yudu, image used: original drawing}

AND:

will lamson held a lecture at byu's museum of art tonight as a special guest speaker. i think he is just great.  here are some of my favorite works of his, and if you want to check out the rest, go here

A Line Describing the Sun. (melted earth in the Mojave Dessert). 

your first impression is to laugh, because it is quite funny. even though you anticipate the balloons, each unexpected pop still makes you and him jump. but when you watch it there are these tender moments where will and the balloon are in equilibrium. the balloon is floating and his breath is sustaining it- it's intimate. then the inescapable happens- will runs out of breath and the balloon falls towards his face, bringing a resounding pop once more. 


and then there are these drawings made by things like the sea, a kite, a tree, etc. wind and water automatically make the marks. it's a beautiful idea. art and nature working together, as it should be. the energy not only shapes grand art objects like cliffs and mountains, but it also is used to translate that movement and life into less permanent art. {excuse the blurry screen shots}.

this is probably one of his most well-know pieces. because it is great {of course}. he hunts shoes in brooklyn with a razor bow & arrow, gathers them, and then replaces them with the shoes he is wearing, all on a bike. it is the act of making visible but invisible marks. he is changing the environment, but only slightly. 

you will just have to go watch it on his site since i can't find a youtube clip. i love the simplicity of this video. he just bounces a white orb around. it is quiet as the celestial sphere slowly fades into the distance as he tries to keep up with its movement. { i suppose i might like it so much because it reminds me of when i lit thai lanterns in chiang rai}. 


also, i just got three rolls of film back today from the developer, so look forward to those posts! and i promise to blog about the naea conference in new york asap. and by asap i mean hopefully tomorrow. happy weekend. 


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

and i'm a mormon.

last semester i filled out a profile on mormon.org. i checked it frequently but every time i looked it still hadn't been approved. tonight i remembered i hadn't checked in a while, and just like that it was up! there are some things about it i wish i could change/re-write and it's not even been that long...funny how quickly we change {i even used a picture of me when my hair was red}. the rest of my profile is cut out of the picture, so if you want to read all of it you will have to go look me up!

anyway i recommend you all make one. and if you aren't mormon go check out the site for more info on The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or ask me any questions you might have and i will do my best to answer them! 


also, check out this video of my awesome professor dan barney's wife cassandra. he is one of my favorite teachers ever. have i mentioned how much i love the opportunities i have as an art education student at BYU? because i do. i have the best classes, with the best of people. not many people can say that they welded or screen printed today.


oh hey and i also created this person in photoshop in one of my classes. she is made up of six different people. {body/face shape: ellie, eye shape/brow: stacey, eye color: holli, nose: me, mouth: courtney, hair/ears: emily}. the background is a picture i took of a field in france, and i even added a sheep. don't believe everything you see in magazines folks, because all of it is photoshopped. and as you can see, pretty much anything is possible thanks to adobe. {and she definitely isn't perfect}.


Sunday, March 11, 2012

ceramics.

last month i finished my [block] ceramic fundamentals class last month. thank goodness. {i am now in sculpture as well as 3d design}. here are some of my pieces, many of which are in really bad lighting, and i have no desire to take pictures of the final product of some of these either. oh well.

 manmade: owl earring

 manmade: pillow

organic: mustache installation

 these took a really long time. each of them are hollow and i couldn't let them dry all the way so i could put black slip over them to scraffio texture on them. i had 15 in total, i wanted 30 but after spending all weekend with them there was no way. 
after firing them, glazing them, and then firing them again, some of the hole i put in them closed up with glaze so i had to use a mason bit to re-drill the holes. and miraculously none of them cracked. 

i then spent the night trying to figure out the best way to tie knots in fishing line so i could hang them from the ceiling. i am no fisher...i always felt bad for the fish and even when i did go fishing my dad tied the knots for me. so what did i do? just tied a bunch of knots. the picture above is 3 different shots of what it looked like hanging in the classroom the day of critique. they are now in my apartment waiting to be hung. they were awesome and i am still pleasantly surprised that they came out just how i planned. 


 organic: bubbles? molecules? lots of tiny hollow spheres.

 a shot of my unglazed mustaches, fired organic, and wet final piece. the final was an enlargement of the organic piece and measured to 22 inches. one of the spheres was literally as big or bigger than my head. it took a lot of work getting it all to stay together and not cave in.  

 then i get a an email saying some of the piece had blown up in the kiln. i go in to check and i see that one of them is mine. great. i had built it so carefully...but i was told i had some bubbles trapped in the clay. {i heard that one of the professors heated the kiln too quickly, so that is my theory of why it exploded}. the biggest sphere was irreparable. but after grinding down the edges and glueing them together with this stuff strong enough to repair a car, it kinda looked something like its old self. 

 so i used the only colors of spray paint they really had since i couldn't re-fire it. and voilĂ .

 some of you have seen my mini diana before right? well this it but less mini with a ribbon added on. manmade: camera. 

in total: 7 pieces. {i already posted about the raku}.
definitely don't miss the long nights covered in dust and clay. but then again i live in fear of chopping my finger off in sculpture and 3d design. i am currently bronze casting, carving alabaster stone, and welding steel. until then.