That's not to say I didn't enjoy it... I actually learned some very useful things this semester, especially in my studios.
I'm going to have to split this post in half because there's a LOT of material.
My 3-Dimensional art studio (ART 115) was a challenge, to say the least, as I have only really ever worked in the 2-Dimensional. It took me a while to switch my brain over.
The first day of class, we were handed a lump of clay and told to make something, anything, so I made this:
| "Mary" |
Although she's a little crude and not at all like I intended, I kind of like the effect.
Our next assignment was a relief sculpture, also made out of clay. I've already shown it in a previous post, so I won't go into too much detail, but I will say that I think it looks more like it should be on a sarcophagus than a wall.
| "Reflecting on Eternity" |
| "Museum Piece" |
Wire. It's terrible stuff. The kind we used was hard to bend and left a greasy black residue on my hands. And yet, though my hands were pinched, poked, and sore, I like my sculpture. It was actually supposed to be a fish, until it grew wings... and sharp-teeth.
As you can see, I continued with the reptilian theme in my next project:
| "In Motion" |
Wood is just as big a pain as wire. Luckily, thanks to my years taking stagecraft in high school, I knew how to use all of the power tools, but building a sculpture is VERY different from building a set, and I'm not so happy with the result, except for its EXCEPTIONAL smoothness. Seriously, I wish that you could touch it.
Our fourth project was a group project, much to my dismay. After much stressing and nagging and, finally, giving up, it all came together in a statement about the current condition of the sought-after college degree.
| "Future" |
I was greatly relieved when I could finally work on my own again. The next two projects, plaster and pewter, both involved molds.
| "Immature" |
I used a hammer and chisel to carve her out of a solid block, feeling quite Paleolithic the entire time. At one point I was getting really frustrated because red stains kept appearing on the sculpture while I was working on it and I could not figure out where they were coming from. Finally, I realized it was blood; I had apparently chiseled off a piece of my finger without noticing. A Band-Aid solved that particular problem.
As much fun as that was, the pewter project was my favorite (until the final).
| "Restless" |
Over the course of one (three-hour) class period, I carved all of the details into a cuttlefish bone, then poured melted pewter into the mold. I didn't pour enough metal in, so the left side is (beautifully, in my opinion) unfinished. I'm going to make it into a necklace.
In November, I got strep throat. But I still had a project due, "Life and Death," and had to work through it. I had so many great ideas, but I just didn't have the energy to do most of them, which left me with Plan "G."
| "Paradise" |
I dunno, I guess it's pretty cool... if you imagine an entire room filled with the candles.
My final project, I think, is the best one, and has the most personal meaning.
| "From Within" |
I got really, really sick the summer I turned sixteen. After months of suffering culminating in a two-week long hospital stay, I was diagnosed with Chrones, a chronic autoimmune disease that affects the digestive tract. However, just as the disease comes from within, so does the strength to overcome it, a truth that I hope my piece is able to convey.
Anyways, as always, I do take commissions, so if you like one of my pieces I would love to make you something similar.
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