Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Project 4 proposal

          The critique had given me a lot of help when thinking about what I am doing as an artist.  The critique had told me about how to keep a focus and to really blow up that focus making the piece stronger. With keeping the critique in mind, I have decided that I will be exploring the idea of collage but still keep that focal point as I had done with the last project. I really want to have the focus IN YOUR FACE when you look at it. In order to do that like I said, I will have the collage aspect as part of the image and then have the focal point on top. I will also be incorporating the bright toxic looking green into the piece. The work will be mixed media having it be both drawn and painted.  At this time I imagine both pieces being made in this way still having this idea of the decay of the world around us due to our own actions through either industry or pollution.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Project #3 proposal

For project three I will be depicting the effects on the marine life due to the contamination into the water and our oceans. The projects will be primarily painted with a dark feel to them and will be made to convey a strong political message that hopes to make the viewer think about it with almost a shock factor but also to agitate a curious feeling about it.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Sketchbook works of Given items.

Created from a page from a book, and other ripped colored papers.
A gargoyle on a stone perch. The perch is part of a map of the east coast. Cut along the coast to get the shape, and then the lines are segments of roads and state borders.

Line drawing of a town. I used the box by cutting it up and using each part as signs or labels for the buildings and on other items.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Julie Mehretu

Before Viewing

  • How does the scale of an artwork affect the way that one might experience it?

         The scale of an artwork can make the viewer see the work differently as a whole in comparison to what the work may look like in section up close.

  • How do artists use strategies of erasure and concealment in their work, and to what effect? Can absence be as compelling as presence? How?

        Using strategies of erasure and concealment can be used to create mystery therefore creating a more interesting piece.

  • How can the process of drawing and painting, like sculpture, be both additive and subtractive?


         When you add onto something in either drawing or painting, one is covering what was previously there either negative or positive space.


While Viewing

  • What roles do Mehretu's assistants play in the process of creating her work? How might her paintings make the viewer reconsider those forms, and see them in new ways?
          Mehretu's assistants help create the finished product of her work with some of the general grunt work of sanding, and perfecting the slight mistakes in the creating of the piece. Each of the assistants come from an art background and have been placed into their own jobs. The piece itself are geometric with shapes and lines going everywhere similar to those on complicated maps and diagrams. Maps and diagrams can look much like art being seen as patterns and paths which the eye is taken on.

After Viewing

  • How do Mehretu's paintings relate to works of epic scale in the history of art? How would you describe her work, in relation to building and architecture, or destruction and disintegration? What might the history include? How can the artist incorporate these ideas in one painting?
          In history there are paintings of great scales stories high in and on buildings. Although the style has changed the effect of working so large has remained constant. 
          When Mehretu talks of the history of capitalism and economic development of lower Manhattan she may be referencing the times of economic hardship and the attempt at rebuilding the financial well being of those in the area. In order to incorporate these ideas an artist could use those ideas of absence as though a piece of what the area was has been lost, or broken.

  • How do artists use strategies of erasure and concealment in their work, and to what effect? Can absence be as compelling as presence? How?
          Artists paint over their work sometimes large portions erasing what was there to add another element or to change how the work was previously seen. This absence in a work can be just as compelling as presence by creating an openness and wonder to the work creating questions for the viewer.






Thursday, October 2, 2014

Project #2 Proposal

I am continuing to create another representational piece but somewhere between political and social/cultural theme. By having the ideas of life and the many causes of chemicals and harmful substances in our lives I will juxtapose them together into one piece. The juxtaposition will include a surrealist feel by implementing an almost impossible looking scenario. Although my first project was small in size I plan on working larger and hope to make the best use of positive and negative space. Working with colored pencils  will be using color int he piece. The scene may have darker commentary to it due to the topic so I will be working off of the brown paper in order to not have to overcome the lightness of white paper.

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Project #1 Proposal

I plan on making a representational piece with a political theme. By contrasting environment with industry, I will be using juxtaposition contrasting the two right next to each other. The piece will have a figure made out of aspects of nature seeming to crawl away while being taken over by the industry. The piece will be made from color pencils on paper.

Conceptual Artist page - Mel Bochner


Ink Blot Drawing


1) What difficulties did you encounter?
     I had a difficult time breaking out from keeping everything very precise and in the lines, to making it more wild and vulnerable feeling.

2) Does the studio work look how I pictured it?
     I worked from what I originally imagined, but then went on to add more to further improve the piece.
3) What is your favorite part about your final studio piece?
     My favorite part is how the colours ran together and mixed making the patterns more interesting to look at than a single colour.

Friday, September 12, 2014

Artist's Statement

My work mostly consists of drawings made with various pencils and pens or ink. I enjoy the control in knowing exactly what I put onto the paper. The ability to have precision but also having the ability to do spastic or spontaneous motions on paper allows me to make my ideas become more than just an image put on paper. I enjoy making works which show some kind of controversy or conflict along with a sense of surrealism and fantasy; by including these unreal aspects to the straight forward it makes a more interesting way of portraying the message. Having the conflict be less clear allows for the viewer to be open to how they think about the subject, this is what I hope to accomplish through my work.