Tuesday, March 25, 2008

3D Sculpture + 2D Illustration = Sculptistration

Previously I was trying to solve how to bring an antique photograph, but more importantly the figures contained within back to life. My initial plan was to make a fully free-standing man that would interrupt space more than my previous sculptures from last year. As I continued building him, something happened, and I didn’t want to only use clay anymore. I wanted to mix my media, have some wire-form body parts, and Abby and I just recently came to the conclusion that he will be sitting on a podium that I will construct.

So then the question of how to combine 3d clay sculpture with wire-forms, and also 2d drawing/illustration on the side of the podium.
I started looking at my photographs first, which some of the one that inspired the original idea can be found here…

Accidental Mysteries

So then I had to start thinking about how to combine a 3D figure with the 2D surface of the podium, and I started looking as works such as these by Kaitlyn Chong and Paul Egan and Michael Schuhhardt…




So I am currently getting all my pieces together, so that I can assemble them out of the kiln.

Monday, March 24, 2008

mundane migration

After shooting pins for a stop-motion during the past few weeks--life is draining out of me.  

I'm still interested in migration, and so after working through some potential technical obstacles (thanks, Abby) I'm getting back into the idea of a video-piece, but with a more diverse range of footage.  It's funny because I never liked 'video work' very much, but I'm realizing that medium is just that...medium.  And the ones that work best for your idea make the most sense to use. THOUGH I'm definitely still digging through a variety of sources for inspiration.
(this is an architect's traffic-map of philadelphia)
oh, and i've met special collections at the library. amazing.
So im still working on all of my little words games. Nothing new there. Though I seem to have hit a little roadblock with some of the details of some that im working on now. Its just taking a little longer than I would have liked, so I havent produced as many as should have been completed by now. And of course anytime youd like to take a peek at them, they are all sitting on my shelf. They are the brightly painted strange little characters on the first shelf on the left as you walk in the door. So since there isnt much to talk about there, Id just like to note how im extremely interested and amused by the responses I get as Im working on these pieces in the studio. It has become even more of a game as people continually try to guess what they are and what they mean as Im building them. It amuses me even more when strangers just walking by the studio stop, inspect, and say "cool, whats this for?" and everytime I simply respond with "its a word game". It confuses people. Its like they arent expecting it to be something like that, like they think its going to be a piece of some big conceptual piece. And I love that. Also I find it interesting that people keep asking me things like "why dont you just go get a real one instead of making one out of clay", or "why dont you just make a mold out of a real one?". The answer is simple. I love the challenge of recreating the details of real objects without taking an easy way out to represent them. I think that additional struggle of the human hand is a big part of what I strive for in my pieces. Right then. Thats about it. Ill keep them coming as fast as I can, and feel free to keep guessing and asking questions. :)

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Teaching Myself Patience

I've noticed the reoccurring theme in my work of choosing to do somewhat monotonous things that take me along time. I have trouble focusing on one thing for more than a few hours at a time so I find it weird that I always end up doing this repetitive process. ex: cutting out hundreds of circles, painting hundreds of dots, sewing many ruffles. I think my art is turning out to be more process oriented than I ever intended. And I'm ok with that.

Friday, March 21, 2008

collab

Tracy and I are doing a collaboration for the second project incorporating ceramic and print. She's focusing on formal printmaking techniques and I'm focusing on photo techniques.


So this video basically sums up my end of our collaboration but picture it on ceramic and not watercolor paper.

MJ, MJ, & Free Willy

Not too much to do with ceramics, but this is about where I am right now.




Thursday, March 20, 2008

hi, so i've been working on my gum and its a slow process but its working out really well.

I've been thinking about some different environmental things i'd like to pursue in the future.





What's good with God?


So not much for my project has really changed except for the fact that i will be presenting it in the dark now... To the left is a picture of LED lights that I am going to use to light it, I think that they will be bright enough to give the information that is needed to experience the piece and still maintain that mysterious quality that I want.

Other than that I am just trying to solve the problem of hanging them up and maybe incorporate motion and the sound piece is finished but that is going to be a surprise!
emotion


I've been watching a lot of videos lately from a potter in Spain. Besides the more obvious practical tips there is a certain rhythm to his throwing that is addicting. In this particular video he's throwing bowls and the sunlight catches the wet clay in a beautiful way. he's quite the sociable potter. I love studying the way he has streamlined his production so that the motions of throwing are seamless. You don't need to watch the whole video to get a sense of this.










I've also been looking a lot at the work of Matt Long. There is an emotive quality about his work. The tones of glaze, textures of clip and forms of vessels and handles all provoke different moods.




























Moving on from my ideas about light and the ways it is reflected and obstructed, there is a more universal concept of the mood that is generated by a pot's interaction with light.






Here are also some soda-fired peices from Emily Murphy.













is there such a thing as prescriptive emotion?











Wednesday, March 19, 2008

NY Changed My Life... Well Sort of.

So my first trip to New York was a success thanks to the watchful eyes of Abby and Tom. 4 hours on a bus, 3 and a half museums, One cab ride, A quick lunch in a Diner, A Subway excursion, and 70 some blocks later.... I have some changes to make to my projected project. I believe that one should be able to completely work, and rework their art as needed. So I have! I now know that I don't want the "me" that will be on the bench to be simply clay, I want to incorporate other objects. I am that girl that you see picking crap up off the streets, yep that's me. I love buttons, old earrings, little trinkets that others have left behind, yet I just can't seem to walk over. I don't know yet if I will use these things for my body, but I do know that I want them in the installation somewhere. Back to clay me. I decided that I wanted to use plastic to make up some of my body. I think it creates a wonderful contrast with the clay. I have an open mind so I want to work with the material more before I decide once and for all how this is all going to play out.
Update: Bugs are fired, over spring break I plan to paint and assemble them so that one and all can get to know them, or see them ;).

So after visiting New York I have looked into a few artists:
My favorite though is Kristen Morin: GOOGLE HER NOW!
http://www.marcselwynfineart.com/artists/morgin/morgin.html



NEXT, Julie Mehretu (She's in the MoMA)
The size and confusion brought about by her piece completely captured my attention!

Finally I love the use of color in (monochromatic in an elegant way)....Lisa Yuskavage's "The Wrist Corsage"

Conclusion: NY re-worked my thoughts. Color is coming in a big way. Finally I love NY now. (Wow I'm sheltered)
~Ash

Tuesday, March 18, 2008





I've been hunting and gathering.
I keep telling myself it will make sense. Can't shoot things down if you don't give them a chance. These are my chances. It's a gamble.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

who put the gold


here's that link everyone, and remember: watch as much sanford and son as possible!

http://www.mybarbarian.com/

Sunday, March 2, 2008

“Isn’t he that creepy Ron Jeremy look-alike that masturbated under a ramp?”



On Friday, February 29th, a cohort and myself traversed the asphalt paved paths to an incredible opportunity at UPenn. In conjunction with the exhibition “Power Fields: Explorations in the work of Vito Acconci” at the Slought Foundation, Mr. Acconci spoke that night to a sea of people dressed in mourning at UPenn. Aptly named, his talk “From Word to Action to Architecture” cycled his career, aesthetic explorations, and the progression of chosen medium. He started out using words as a material with an agenda to make them as literal as possible. One of which I really enjoyed was, for example:

“On the one hand there is a finger.
On the one hand there is another finger.
On the one hand there is another finger.
On the one hand there is another finger.
On the one hand there is another finger.”

From there he started to incorporate words with action. He would read as he was walking so as to translate spoken word into time and distance. One of the great things about his early work is that it is a non-traditional artist’s medium, like paint or clay. Which coincides with the great facet of art, which is that (what he explained it as) it is a “non-field field” in which one can “import from any field”. As he progressed along the timeline he spoke about his Following Piece in which he was interested in a real space and how he would move through it. This ultimately was by way of a randomly chosen pedestrian. He talked about how his movements than became the emulation of another’s, and how he became tied into someone else’s time and space, literally being dragged along. He was extremely fascinated in the role of the viewers and the attempt to actively engage them. So he began making works in which he made himself vulnerable (there include most of his video pieces such as converging). He expressed his theory in which he felt this would open up the circular exchange of the artist and action in turn extending it to the viewer. Yet in retrospect he said that in these explorations “I started an action that ended in me”. This closed the circle, creating the voyeuristic viewer. Which is where his work then shifted to live performance. This includes works such as Claim, and the infamous Seed Bed. In which the former turned out to perpetuate the hierarchical role of artist and viewer and in which in the latter though trying to become part of the space he questioned whether his presence was superfluous. After this he became extremely interested in installation and art that only made sense in a particular space, which soon changed into an attempt to redo architecture and became involved with various public art projects. This was the shift from where he stopped working alone and instead in a group (Acconci Studios). “If you start private it will end private, and if you start quasi public it will end publically. “ One project in which he was involved with was to redesign the WTC. This was a “pre-exploded WTC so that if terrorists were flying by they would look down and see that this one was already taken care of and that they would just pass it by”.

The best part was when you headed over to the gallery, which had all his documented work, videos, and architectural design. This space was literally a labyrinth in which gallery goers were forced to interact with one another. The main room house this enormous amorphously shaped table that came up to your shin, in which viewers could sit on the pepto bismol pink table/bench and peruse through copies of his textual works. This was AWESOME because during the talk he had spoke various times on how it was important for him to try to re create the gallery space as one in which people could gather.

ps. IF YOU GET A CHANCE YOU SHOULD CHECK IT OUT!!!!