Metallic honeycomb protects coloured wires from exposure. Red
and blue line aluminium, shooting throughout the ceiling, which is constructed
from yellow musk tiles. There are four visible, arranged as hopscotch, littered
with drill holes. Twin, thin wire is trapped between the chicken wire and
tiles, as if lacing the metal work together, a small line sewing the ceiling.
In addition to this, three black plastic ties are used, two in the centre and
one on the right-hand side, seemingly not strong enough to hold an important
structure. To the right there is also more metal, the grid is stopped with
rough edges, disappearing in front of steel, curved to follow the shape of the
wall. Extending from this edge there is more plastic, creating a horizontal
curve to the left, once again framed by hard metal, two pieces that create a
step, building the plastic away from the ceiling, crossing the thin wire, which
holds another black tie, this time horizontal. Further towards the centre there
is a piece of re, possibly a reflection of light, trapped between the honeycomb
and base. There are two steel hinges, attaching a vertical metal bar to the
ceiling. This is also secured to the plastic, crossing with a bolt, one of
four, all screwed in at equal intervals throughout the plastic. A blue vertical
wire pierces the yellow, slicing through the exposed area. This is framed by
more thin wire, leading throughout the frame. There is a red wire too, of the
same thickness and brightness, once again shooting through the area, alongside
eight more slices of metal, the edges lit by an unknown source.
Friday, 14 April 2017
Thursday, 13 April 2017
The Underground
Tuesday, 21 March 2017
Phootshoot 2
Labels:
art,
art crit,
artist,
black and white,
buildings,
canal,
digital art,
Fine Art,
fine art degree,
grid,
image,
old,
photography,
reflection,
rust,
street photography,
water,
worcester
When 2 become 1
Further experimentation with sound
If in doubt throw everything together and see what happens...
Labels:
clip,
contemporary,
Fine Art,
fine art degree,
grey description,
sound,
sound art,
text,
voice
Tuesday, 7 March 2017
Critical Writing Task
Critical Writing Task

It is important to mention the embroidery is a human figure,
an anonymous but naked female, who is faceless in every image- thus
investigating themes of identity, as families are usually seen to involve feelings
of belonging, whereas the addition of the character disregards this, and appears
almost alien to the situation, only identifiable by breasts, hips, and long
hair. The simplicity of the woman also contrasts against the complexity of real
family life, once again highlighting the incongruous nature of the figures
appearance in the work.
In addition to this,
the naked body seems out of place or inappropriate once combined with a mundane
situation. These contrasting themes of innocence versus nudity encourages the
audience to consider the relationship between the stories told by the
photographs and the nude body. Much like storytelling, the needle and thread
act as a pen, writing characters into the tale.
The motion of pushing the needle through, up and down, alters
the space between the audience and the work, as if the viewer is being sewn in
too. This proximity changes the intimacy of the photographs, reflecting the
naked body. This element of space almost makes the audience identify with the
woman, feeling sympathy for her (as naked figures are often associated with
vulnerability) and wanting to understand why or what she is doing in these people’s
home; Is she a family member? Is she a real person or could she be symbolic? Is
the same person stitched throughout each photo of the series? What is her significance?
Could the work be a political or societal statement? Is the whole series one
story, or twelve separate ones? These questions invite the audience to create
their own story and interpretation.
The work asks the question of the connection between the
original photograph and the woman. The use of black and white images is
significant in relation to ideas of time, which adds context to the narrative. The
outmoded, greyscale images highly contrast against the blue, green, red, and
yellow threads. As well as making the figure stand out, demanding the viewers’
attention- she is in no way hidden, this implies that time has changed. She is
a recent addition, once again channelling the intrusive nature of her presence.
This can be seen through the bold colours used, which seem to bare no
resemblance to real life, therefore indicating she is a fictional character, or
a personified metaphor, adding to the fiction.
Critical Writing Task brief
Let's get critical, critical, I want to get critical
Why be critical: Without being critical of our own work and others, it will just stand still, and you won't move forwards.
What does it mean: Looking; teaching yourself to look.
Your subjective encounter is your initial reaction to a work. You should challenge this as it could be more to do with how you're feeling than the work- are you hungry? Also should consider whether or not pre held ideas are helpful- you're not always right, A level's not always right.
Your objective encounter is how you pull apart your subjective response.
Toolkit:
- Critical tools- Aspect lectures on space, surface, time, fiction
- Help- Footnotes task, grey description task; what is actually there?
- Subject-Object grid, crit questions
- Be specific
Text to Speech
After writing up a grey description of one of my photos, I
asked my fellow arty type best friend Leah to record herself reading it, in one
take. I chose to ask her as I wanted someone who hasn't seen the image, to look
at how successful (or not) I was in communicating visual information through
words.
With the idea of presenting the photo as a sound work,
rather than image, I edited the sound clip and added a white space, with the
intention of it blending into the white walls of the gallery space.
This was the result:
I then experimented with how tone of voice and emotion
affects the communication. To do this I used google translate TTS, to create a
flat, monotonous and continuous voice.
Can words be art?
Grey Description -> Text works
"Images are more precise and richer than literature" p.10, Ways Of Seeing, John Berger
"Images are more precise and richer than literature" p.10, Ways Of Seeing, John Berger
- Write what you see, what's there?
- Thinking about presenting the text without the photo- would it work? Should I include the image?
- The more detail the better
- Use a standard size and style font.
- Emotion?
From this I wrote a grey description, using this photo as the subject.
"Throughout the carriage canary parrots, radiating from ten
vertical poles, which allow anonymous primates to hang and balance, as the mobile
flooring jolts and sways beneath them. To the left, behind one stanchion,
reaching half the height of the car, an unidentified figure can be seen in a
mustard coat. Thin black bugs connect longitudinal waves to an electrical
device, linked via a thin black cable, tangled amongst a burnt sienna scarf.
Knotted pink fingers grip the gadget close to an average frame. A corrugated
plastic hexagon couples two sections together, dancing in time with the deck. At
the highest point a honeycomb of metal guards a fluorescent tube, illuminating
the foreground. Beyond this, cuboid light-emitting diodes brighten silhouettes.
Reflecting against two visible surfaces, yellow and white combine to fuse
cream, contrasting against a section of ultraviolet light within the corrugated
sector. Incandescent words in the upper- centre read ‘The next Station...’, and
although out of focus, this is repeated approximately six meters ahead. Above
this the same text is flipped into the ceiling, mirrored, and illegible.
Vertical and horizontal lines cross, creating an ongoing grid,
broken by bodies. Further ahead the coach seems to get busier, with thirteen
visible, yet unknown individuals. Warmth from the chaos of the intertwined is
juxtaposed by cold blue light, leaked by the emptiness of the forepart.
However, this matches one, two, three blue notices, which nobody seems to be
paying attention to. The signs are white, with cobalt blue rectangles and small
black writing, that cannot be read unless up close. They are all obstructed by
the shapes and forms of the carriage, blocking information, and hiding tidings.
It is quiet, which is unusual, given the situation of thirteen strangers in a
pod. Not one appears interested or to be engaged with anyone else. They are
separate forms, brought together only by yellow poles. Three of them; one sat,
head down, one holding a horizontal bar and staring ahead, and one engaged with
a mobile, wear hats. They all wear black coats. In the centre, there is a
child. They wear a venetian red coat with a faux fur stripe around the hood.
They stand with their small arm laced around a post, which due to the lighting
appears to extend past and into the ceiling. This same shade of red is repeated
as the details of a polka dot bag, which is navy, and the mobile phone of a
seated woman. Her eyes are focused on the screen, that is held up above a blurred
newspaper, resting upon on her knee. The newspaper is the evening standard,
blue capital text against dirty white paper. It features a face that’s
reminiscent of an orange Sainsbury’s carrier bag."
- Text or sound? - Sound could be more engaging, people may be more willing to listen than read
- Could use a white/blank screen- what are they seeing? Removes context. Only words.
- Speakers or headphones?
- What tone of voice? Monotonous: even less context/emotional impact, less connected, more like a script? Enthusiastic?
If speech- do I want the speaker to have seen the photo before recording, or should it be blind? Could try doing both myself, although other people would change the relationship, adding another layer to the work.
Edits continued
Editing
Aspect Lecture #4
Fiction
Here are my highly anticipated lecture notes on 'Fiction' by James Fisher.
note: Thinking about changing the space between the viewer and figures in the work just really reminded me of Ferris Bueller's Day Off, you can watch the opening monologue here and I'd highly recommend it even if you've already seen it before:
Other than that...the most important things I took from the lecture were;
- Thinking about your relationship with the material and thinking about the making process; is it autobiographical?
- Thinking about news way to tell stories, through photography and film.
- How do you know when a story is over? How do you know when something's finished?
Ryan Gander as a curator
Night in the Museum - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery
"The role of curator is one of gathering and collecting, grouping and assembling- instincts innate in all of us. Choosing what clothes you put on in the morning, what objects you arrange on the mantelpiece or even what to eat when friends come to dinner are all curatorial acts...Just because we are not knowingly being creative and curatorial, doesn't mean we are not being curatorial and creative."- Ryan Gander
This exhibition questioned the role of the curator as a mediator between art and the public, looking beyond traditional relationships; changing the relationship between the contemporary and traditional art, and the viewer, in some kind of weird art threesome.
- Could think about other ways to present work together, rather than just putting a painting in a frame on a wall.
- Consider space in a different way, galleries have lots of empty space, how can you use it better?
- Are there any themes that run through the work which can be used to link it together? (i.e. blue)
- Think about how the viewer will see it
Contact Sheets
Whilst in London I wanted to try doing some more street photography, as the environment and general atmosphere is much different to in Worcester.
To select which images I wanted to take further I annotated them in my sketchbook, picking out patterns and colours that stood out to me. I then found common themes; looking at line/structures/grids, crowds(where there is more information to take in) and single colours, particularly yellow and red.
From here I thought about presenting the work as a series, with some photos in black and white and others worked on top of in the same yellow or red colours.
I also wanted to try them in black and white, as no colour removes context; so there is more for the viewer to question, possibly making it more engaging?
- Could try writing grey descriptions of photos and present this alongside the edit?
- Need to develop film
Anselm Kiefer at the White Cube
Recently/a while ago whilst the exhibition was still on/nearly two months ago, after being recommended by a lecturer, I ventured to London to see Anselm Kiefer's 'Walhalla' at the White Cube. The exhibition consisted of installation, painting and sculpture.
As you enter the exhibition, you walk into a dark space, a corridor of beds/sculpture work, lit from above. As well as looking at the art, I wanted to see how curation can be used to effect the viewer, as well as perception of the work; do things change via how they're presented?
I was also interested in the impact of using texture and building into into work. Kiefer used Led, but I could look at using different materials with my work, perhaps materials that wouldn't usually be considered artistic tools.
There was also a small room, again dark, which appeared to be a material cupboard, materials he's collected over time, with negatives enlarged onto led draping which I found particularly interesting. I think it reinforces the idea that you should surround yourself with your work, and not just do it and put it away- when is a piece of art complete? The black and white photography also made me want to go and do some more street photography, so I did this, on my DSLR and 35mm, in London on the same day.
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