Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2014

Arting It Up

Hello! Yes I am still here, and yes I am still making art! I tell you, this school year is absolutely insane. I cannot remember a time where I have been so outrageously busy as I have been the past four weeks. But I digress - My sister just highlighted me in her blog today (click here!), and I figured this is the perfect time to update all my social media! May as well, so people know I'm still active. I guess.. I'm very bad at this social media thing. But at any rate, here we are! On my right, we have Barbie Antoinette for my Art History project. I am recreating a dress from Marie Antoinette's time made from tissue paper. She's a work in progress, but I'm having fun.
Below we have my finished Season Series from Ceramics. All glazed and fired and looking pretty fabulous, if I do say so myself.
 We have Spring on the left and Autumn on the right.


 And Winter on the left and Summer on the right.

 I had a particularly good day in drawing today, knocking off two impressive (for me) 15-minute drawings of one of our models, and two equally as impressive 1-hr long drawings of one of our other models, both done in chalk pastel (below).


 A couple self portraits. The one on the left was done a couple weeks ago, the left page being a line drawing and the right being tonal. The image on the right is an unfinished composition of three self portraits, but the top left face is complete and I am very happy with it.


Last but never least we have painting. The one on the left was for our Halloween project called "Dance with Death", and I decided to do death of religion and get all symbolic. Which I did and it was great, but I would have liked to maybe do another one that was actually scary and more Halloweeny. Oh well. On the right I have a splatter painting that I did today that I think is rather neat and I would like to make more of them. And so I am. Because they're fun. I'm also experimenting with colour and colour mixing. There are colours that can mix with other colours, and there are colours that should never touch each other. I am experimenting with those pallettes and I am excited to see what sorts of colours I can come up with.

In the meantime I am staying busy with the Visual Art Society. We just had our first art sale and we are planning for our Christmas sale taking place in a couple of weeks here. Ain't no rest for the wicked, that's for sure!

Until next time, peace and love my pretties :)

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Art Update

I have been ridiculously busy these past couple of weeks, and here's some pictures to help show why.

First we have mine and Hannah's space we took over whilst studying for our Art History midterm. The exam was seperated into two parts - one was an in class slide recognition, and the other was a take home, open book. Final mark: 98%. :)
Next we have painting. First assignment was an Expressive Landscape assignment, in which I completed this 3 feet x 3 feet acrylic painting. Our second assignment was another three week one, called Three Style Boogie. The idea was we drew randomly from a selection of artistic styles (for example Cubism, Expressionism, Impressionism, etc), and put together a painting using three of them. I drew Orientalism, Comic, and Psychadelic. This is the result. 1.5 feet x 3 feet acrylic.
Something I've realized, now that I'm starting on my third painting, is that there is clearly a colour pallette of choice here. My four colours of choice are Pthalo Blue, Ultramarine Blue, Alizarin Red, and Indian Yellow Hue. If I only ever had those four colours to paint with for the rest of my life, I'd be okay with that.

Moving on, we have drawing. I've done quite a few drawings in the past couple of weeks, as our drawing teacher is insane and assigns a huge amount of homework per week. At any rate, I'll only post pictures of my favourites.



In drawing I was focused on the landscapes, as was the assignment for the last month and a half, but I was also thinking about expression. I was going for expression in line in the two plant drawings, I was going for expression in atmosphere in my two fir tree series, and I was going for a sense of emotion in my colourful one.

And now we  have the class that has been taking absolutely all of my time: Ceramics. Our assignment for the past few weeks is a Pouring and Drinking assignment, focusing on things thrown off the wheel. The idea was to make a series or a set, something that obviously goes with each other. How I chose to deal with this project was just throw throw throw until I had a good amount of stuff, and then try to match them with each other. Because nothing was ever consistent with me, so I ended up with a few different shapes.
At this point in time I have finished glazing all my pieces that are ready to be glazed. Our teacher has this thing against hoarding our work, which makes sense, and I look at all my stuff and scold myself. But then I realize that it's not that I've been hoarding my work; I just made it all at the same time. And I kept...
Making...
More.

Bit of advice: If you're an arts student and you're going into ceramics and you're an over-achiever, you're never going to get any other work done. Ever.

So anyways, I finally have enough stuff bisqued, and before I was ready to glaze I had to sort them out and figure out the set I wanted to put them in. I found a theme. Naturally, it has to do with nature and landscapes, as does everything else in my life apparently.

So first we have spring. I have glazed them with pale, natural colours. I chose these three for spring because the pouring vessel looks like it's melting, the large bowl has black and white drips, as if icicles are melting, and the cup is just nice.





The next set is summer, also three pieces. I chose these three for summer because the pouring vessel looks like a watering can, the bowl looks like a fountain, and the cup has blue and white slip on it, so it's gonna be bright and colourful. I've glazed them with blurs, reds, whites, and yellows if I do remember correctly.

Autumn is next. Oh I should say, the cool thing about what I'm doing now with the pulling of items together after I've made a bunch, is that there was stuff I already had on the go before I was given this assignment, and some of them have just worked out in the themes. So this one's autumn. I'm probably only going to have three pieces, just like the other two seasons, but I've used two pouring vessels in case one doesn't turn out very nicely.
Naturally, I've glazed them ambers, browns, and beiges. Maybe a green or two, too.

And then we have winter. Winter to me is cold and gloomy and dead and gross and I don't like it. So most of my winter pieces I've glazed white, black, beige, and other kinda pale, sickly colours. However I also have some bright red and greens, since Winter to me also means Christmas, and is in fact the only thing that redeems winter in my eyes.


Again, I'm probably only going to have three pieces in the set, but I have extras in case they turn out hideous. I chose these two pouring containers because of the way I've built them, they reminded me of snowmen.

So there you have it! You are now caught up in all my projects. Coming up: Glazed works as well as lots of self portraits and a Halloween painting! Stay tuned!