Friday, December 6, 2013

Project 5: Natural World. Materials and Multiples. Due 12/20

Objective

For this project you will work exclusively with materials you collect from nature. The objective is three-fold.

1. Think about material choices.  Experiment with the use of readily accessible, natural materials.  Define new ways to work with them structurally, and develop a visual language from their use.

2. Observe. Interpret. Respond. Explore the role of the artist as observer/interpreter of culture. (critic, or flaneur).

Process

Step One- Observation

For this exercise, you will consciously begin to think about the world around you, and how you live/exist in it. Look at everything. Your feet when you walk, the trees outside your window. the glass the separates you from those trees. Touch the glass. touch the trees. pay attention. Deep and close, and constant, attention. Do this for the duration of the project.

Step two- Interpretation

Keep a notebook/sketchbook with you and answer the following questions:

  1. What is the nature? How do you envision it? What does it consist of? Describe how it looks? 
  2. How do you personally navigate through the natural world? (walking, driving, flying, etc). 
  3. How do you interact with it? (planting, cutting, growing, killing, nurturing, using)
  4. What other things in our environment affect your relationship to nature? The built environment? Landscape? 

Step three- Respond

Working exclusively with materials you find in the natural world, collect AT LEAST 100 OF THE SAME TYPE OF OBJECT. Examples of materials include: plan frond, driftwood, long grasses, rocks, vines, etc. Continue to think about your observations while you are collecting. Allow your observations to affect your choice of materials. Be choosy, and intentional in your choices. You don't have to understand it all, just be intentional (deliberate). 

Experiment with ways of using your materials. How will you attach them? How can they be manipulated? How can they be transformed? What happens when you have a lot of the same object (multiples)?

Try weaving, braiding, sewing, balancing, tying, bending or whatever technique you come up with to make an object out of the separate materials. At home and during the in-class work day you will try different techniques of arranging or joining your objects together to make one unified form.

Step four- Written review/documentation

After the completion of the sculpture, write a two-page essay describing your initial observations, interpretation, and response. Begin with the answers to the questions above, regarding nature. Use your notes as a starting point, and be sure to elaborate. You will be graded on detail. Be sure to use complete sentences; include the question in your answer. Example>  "The things that most effect my relationship to nature are…", "I envision nature as a…" Nature consists of…" Site any other sources you referred to in your research. How did you come to these conclusions? Did the artistic process change or reinforce our initial ideas of what nature is? In your final paragraph, give a conclusion/closing that summarizes your feeling about nature- how you exist in it, how our culture effects that, how other things mediate your experience of it. How did this project change/or reinforce your attitudes toward nature?

Note: Additional visual documentation details will be given in a separate assignment at the end of the project. This will be part of the assignment over winter break.

IMPORTANT NOTES:


  • The size of the sculpture must be at a minimum of 3 feet long in at least one dimension.
  • Absolutely no glue, wire, string, tape, zip ties, etc. Use only natural materials that you collect.
  • In the creation of your art object, continue to think about your observations. Your sculpture will be your visual response to your observations. 


Schedule

Dec. 6 - Project presented. Observational field trip.

Homework- research, observe, gather, experiment. 
Research the artists listed below. Begin your observations/writing. Gather and experiment with your materials (at least 100 of the same natural material)

Dec. 14- Studio work day.
Come prepared with all of your materials, sketches, and experiments you've already done. This will be the only in-class work day. Plan out what tools you may need to use, so you can use the time wisely.

Dec. 20- Final Critique.

Jan 10- Written report and documentation due.

Inspiration for the project


Check out this show at BFI, called Peace of Mind

Look up the following artists.:
Richard Long
Robert Smithson
Andy Goldsworthy
Agnes Denes







Documentary on the man-made floating islands of Lake Titicaca, Peru, which are made of woven reeds.


Last Year's Projects
Previous year's projects

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Project 4: Soft-Sculpture. Due 11/22

Project Description


Like Claes Oldenberg, you will create a soft version of an everyday object that is normally hard. The transformation (via scale and materiality) of an everyday object changes our relationship to both the artist's version, and to the original.  With this in mind, choose an object that has interesting contours, and that will present an interesting transformation. 

Please Note: No cell phones or iPods, no dolls or characters.

Schedule

Homework for next week 11/1:
1. Collect materials you will use and bring them to class. You will need fabric (any kind, thick or thin, old or new), stuffing (old pillow, packing peanuts, crumpled newspaper, shredded paper), needles and thread.

2. Detailed drawings of the object you will create. Study and draw all sides of the object. Think about the planes and contours that make up the form.

Next week we will teach you how to sew by hand and also using machines. Come prepared to work.
You will have two in-class work days, and will be graded on preparedness, time management and class participation as well as the quality of your final project.

No Class on 11/8: 
Work on projects through the week, and send email to Mr. K or Mr. L for feedback.

Homework for next week 11/15:
Bring everything you need for working in class. You should be 1/3 to 1/2 way done. Today we will talk about adding the details to your project.

Critique date: 11/22

Project requirements

Minimum size 3'x3'x3'
No glue!
Design and construction well-planned

Considerations

What will the scale be? What does that say? (Enlarged, Shrunk, or 1:1)
What are your material choices? (textures, patterns, prints, color, flexibility, etc)
How will it be filled/stuffed? (packing peanuts, feathers, fluff, etc)
How will you deal with surface details?  (You can finish the sculpture however you want, by adding things to the surface, using different materials, buttons, painting, etc.)

Last Year's projects
 2011's projects
2010's projects
2008's projects

See the following Claes Oldenburg Work for inspiration



















Upside Down City


Ice Bag


Surface and details on soft sculpture
Christian Holstadt "The Road to Hell is Paved (Best Buy)
The Road to Hell is Paved (Whole Foods)







Christian Holstad
Defined Thorough Deflation and Limits of Exposure

2004
 Mixed Media: Cashmere coat, tie, white shirt, leather glove, terry cloth, polyester, cotton, vintage millinery trimmings, vintage satin glove, champagne glass, men's suiting and vintage party dress
Dimensions variable

Description of Christian's work:
Two stuffed snakes, a dark male and his floral female mate, lay entwined on the gallery floor clutching a bouquet of microphones. This hand-sewn, soft sculpture, typical of Holstad's interest in traditional forms of craftsmanship, invites us to reconsider culturally prescribed notions of gender, domesticity, and high and low art.



Ideas for how to add detail to your soft sculpture: