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Showing posts with label Disguise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disguise. Show all posts

Friday, 3 October 2014

Intentions - Visual Research Week 1 - Urban Influences

To start my visual research I began searching for artists on Pinterest that work using architecture and the urban environment. I found several artists that use geometric shapes in their work as well as other artists that take a more abstract approach - fitting in perfectly with the drawings I worked on over the summer period.


Dario Moschetta and Karen Benedetti


I have thought about the concept that I adopted over the summer project - 'Disguise and Cover-Up', and by using the urban environment to cover and disguise other things I have managed to include concepts such as; homeless people, new buildings covering old, and detail covering abstract which all still link to my summer concept.


During this first week of the visual research task, I began to collect images of buildings that had geometric shapes in their architecture so I could draw the lines (working in a figurative way). I wanted to find buildings that had an older quality and some that are relatively modern, so to do this I visited Manchester City Centre and MediaCityUK to achieve the contrast I desired. 


After doing several figurative drawings of both buildings and homeless people, I felt my work lacked colour and, as I am an embroiderer, colour is a very important element. Using different wet media and my Costa Loyalty Card, I created backgrounds in which I could layer the drawings over. This is in keeping with my concept 'Disguise and Cover-Up' as the paper dims the colour down slightly in areas.



Whilst thinking about the composition of the architecture in my backgrounds, I picked out elements of detail on the buildings for the foreground. The way the abstract and figurative are collaborated, I believe, make the drawings more interesting to look at and also underpin the concept effectively because of the media used.

Disguise and Cover-Up - Summer 2014


Amy Judd's work is uniquely 'weird' in a sense that she almost creates a disguise by using animal features such as butterflies and birds to cover up the human face. 


'Ascending Athena' and 'The Weight of a Thousand Feathers' (above) are two of her pieces that particularly sparked ideas in my head for further development. I linked this with another one of her pieces where a butterfly covers a girl's face by using segments of a butterfly wing to fan like the feathers on the other images I found. I think her work could relate to either gallery work or the costume industry as it involves the human body as well as animal features.




Using Judd's work to influence my own, I used butterfly wing segments in order to create a feathered effect like in her pieces with bird feathers.


Extending a section of a butterfly wing using watercolour and acrylic paints. This drawing works well because the textures and colours can be related to embroidery relatively easily and effectively. This piece of work could be improved by working in a more abstract manner, using similar colours, and collaborating figurative drawing with abstract colour smudges.

Monday, 22 September 2014

Reflection of Summer Work - Feedback


To begin the new term, we got into groups and discussed how we thought the summer project went for us and showed the rest of the group some of our work - the good, the bad and the downright ugly. 




These were the favourite pieces from the discussions due to their diverse nature - figurative and abstract.

My peers liked the abstract, textural drawings and the colour combinations which I used throughout my drawings the most. They also agreed that my underpinning concept was strong which helped me to develop my artwork further through the summer. They gave me some further ideas however, such as layering texture over my own images to create abstract drawings which depict the idea of disguise and cover-up through other means. This could be done using tracing paper or printing onto acetate, for example. 




Some of the artists that were suggested to me to look at were; Maurizio Anzeri (above) who uses the human face and geometric shapes to create abstract qualities and Lucien Day and Angie Lewin who both use simple prints with linear features within their work.

The group all said that my drawings could be used effectively through embroidery as some were graphic rather than abstract, which could be mixed to create some interesting forms including backgrounds and foregrounds.It was also suggested I consider working in 2D and 3D methods to vary my outcomes.

Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Influences and Inspirations (2)

After researching images relating to disguise on Pinterest, I found that the ones that inspired me the most were the three in my previous post.

I went on to create collages of faces (as seen in my previous post - Waldemar Strempler) by cutting up the facial features of the people in magazines and rearranging them appropriately to create a new face - a 'disguise'. Some of the people look abstract, whereas others quite suit their new features. 



I mixed the idea of disguise with peacock feathers again to create more drawings - using the shapes of the peacock pattern to cover the eyes of someone, for example. I also used similar spherical shapes to create a collage covering the eyes of someone (above top right) - similar to Anton Bundenko.



Looking back at the work of Januz Miralles again, which I found earlier, I have distorted my own collages and found photographs of the human face (in the style of Waldemar Strempler) in order to create some more drawings. Adding different media such as acrylic paints and ink to the distorted images makes them more abstract and like a 'disguise' or a 'cover-up' and relates to the work of Miralles, also. 



I wanted to investigate the idea of disguising the face using other methods, such as covering up aspects of it with an object, or replacing features all together with something totally different - see my Pinterest (http://www.pinterest.com/rmlhaigh/disguise/) for other inspirations from artists such as Amy Judd, who uses animal features to cover the human face. Below, I used the ideas behind her work, teamed with the concept of an image of Twiggy that I discovered on Pinterest, to create my own piece.




I would say my work could be tailored towards the costume industry as I enjoy working with unusual concepts, in a three-dimensional manner. I like working in an abstract way as Miralles and Strempler do, though I am also inspired by unusual and shocking images like Amy Judd and Anton Bundenko create.

Luly Yang is a designer based in Seattle, USA, who predominantly creates gowns and bridal dresses, however, she also is involved in making Haute Couture fashion pieces such as 'The Monarch'.



 It is a custom silk taffeta butterfly print skirt and corset bodice, embellished with hand placed Swarovski crystals and black ostrich feathers. 


Wednesday, 16 July 2014

Influences and Inspirations

Near the beginning of the holidays I visited an Ice Cream Parlour near where I live. At this time I hadn't considered what I could concentrate my thoughts on during the summer break until I saw the peacocks there spreading their tail feathers to show their dominance. I was fascinated by the pattern and the colours that they displayed so I went on to consider how I could develop a project from this idea. My initial thought was that the feathers act as a 'disguise' for the birds so I would like to explore more closely the plumage of Peacocks along with the idea of Disguise. The regal colours in the tail feathers could be said to be the peacock's 'costume' because after stumbling across a white peacock on Pinterest, it appears that the colour has been removed from the bird or like it is wearing a costume/disguise.

 

I carried out two weeks of work experience over the summer at Lime Pictures in Liverpool in the costume and set department of Hollyoaks with a view to experiencing what design is like in industry. The costume department gave me an insight into forming a character over the artistes and made me think more closely about the art of disguise and costume.

After completing the experience at Hollyoaks, I began to brainstorm some different ideas based around the idea of 'disguise' on Pinterest. I wanted to research this idea in more depth and I found a selection of images where the faces of people have been separated and put back together in different compositions or distorted to look like something totally different entirely.


Waldemar Strempler  is an artist that uses collage and digital technologies to create abstract artwork based around the human body. 

This image is one of his more simple pieces, playing with the idea of a woman's facial features. The idea of disguise has the connotation of 'covering up' something or 'transformation' in my mind. 

The Girl with the Peacock Eyes - Anton Bundenko.
A way of altering someone's appearance using similar shapes to what is covered.
 


Januz Miralles also alludes to the human face, but covers it slightly with abstract shapes, forming a cover-up, a disguise.

I would like to now look in more detail at the ideas displayed above as well as removing colour, changing colour and texture and collaging in order to explore the idea of 'disguise' and 'cover-up' more broadly.