Wednesday, April 25, 2018

3D to 2D Digital Image Assignment



3D to 2D Digital Image





3D to 2D Image

Throughout my semester within this course, I have found that my most resolved work was the balsa wood sculpture within the Balsa Wood Sculpture Assignment. As such, I chose to utilize my knowledge in Photoshop in order to alter an image of this piece for the purpose of completing the 3D to 2D assignment. My original balsa wood sculpture, which is depicted below, emphasized the design principle of space through its use of a  hanging sphere and surrounding columns with a revealing exterior composed of balsa wood and clear masking tape. As such, I intended to replicate this principal within a digitally altered version of the artwork.
Within Photoshop, I created new layers from selections composed of the central sphere and its four surrounding columns. Removing the visibility of the rest of the original image, these isolated portions of the compositions were now their own image. I then used the color replacement tool to alter the color of the objects, thus choosing to alter them to possess the bright colors displayed above. I then applied a series of blur filters in order to further distort the image from its original appearance. After altering the objects within the piece, I then inserted a purple background, which I altered through a grain filter. I then surrounded the entire image with a dark purple border, and then proceeded to type the word "Space" in order to clearly define the design principle exhibited by both my original balsa wood sculpture and its digitally altered counterpart.

Original Balsa Wood Sculpture





Adam
Element/Principle: Space
Materials: balsas wood, masking tape, packing tape, straight pins
Dimensions: approx.  6" x 4.75" x 3.75"



Identity Portrait Assignment





Identity Portrait


Process Work




Final Work













Carrion Facade 
materials: wire, tracing paper, gel medium, Styrofoam balls green, black, and red acrylic paint
dimensions: 2.5"x 1"x 0.75"

Artist Statement

The theme of my identity portrait revolves around death, and the ways in which money is associated with it. The term "carrion" within the title means "decaying flesh of dead animals." This definition, along with the fact that the mask that I created is a vulture with a blood-stained beak, a bird that feeds on the dead, supports the theme of death within my work. With regards to the theme of money, the use of green establishes it. The theme is also supported by the attire of me, the model, as a suit is worn within the above photographs. This, coupled with the display of my wallet, a symbol of financial stability within a society that emphasizes economic dominance, pertains to the term "facade within the title. 
The poses within the title are meant to illustrate a facade of stability and slight wealth, when in reality, the model is simply conveying a facade of financial power through their demeanor, attire, and overt display of monetary possession. This sign of weakness is emphasized by the presence of the bird mask itself, as a buzzard is a filthy animal that feeds off of the waste of nature. In the perspective of the human, the model is simply one who capitalizes on opportunities within life in order to further develop their own financial gain within a capitalistic society that favors the wealthy and shuns the impoverished. Within modern society, to lack money is to lack the means necessary to obtain vital resources essential for maintaining the quality of one's life. To be impoverished is to be closer to one's death, as money, the superficial barrier between socioeconomic classes, is absent, thus leading to mental, emotional, and physical decay.


Research Items





Eaton Nott





Craig Green





Clarina Bezzola


Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Memento Assignment





Memento


Process Work







Final Work








                                                                       Four Years
                                                      materials: wood, red ink, yellow ink
                                                       dimensions: 0.45"x 0.25"x 0.15"



                                                                        Artist Statement


This piece was inspired by a memory of my high school graduation. I chose this memory because of the emotions that I felt during this event. My high school graduation was the end of my childhood, and the conclusion of twelve years of work throughout my education before college. I remember feeling immense joy and satisfaction during this instance; unfortunately, I have not felt this amount of positive emotions since graduating from high school. I recall my sister, me oldest sibling and the first of my immediate family to complete college, stating that my life as a young adult would be "downhill from there." While I initially dismissed this warning, I instinctively knew it to be true.
I utilized four pieces of wood to create this piece. I used various wood cutting and sanding tools in order to create a small  "pillar of wood." Each individual segment represents a year in high school. Segments decrease in size in a vertical nature from the bottom to the top of the sculpture. This symbolizes the diminishing time between childhood and adulthood, which I acknowledged during high school. The red and yellow ink that were use to ass color to the sculpture represent the joy that I experienced during graduation, as well as the fear of my uncertain future that I had also possessed during this instance. I also utilized tools within the art building's wood shop in order to carve the year of my graduation, as well as symbols associated with my high school, into the sculpture.





Visual Research/Artist Inspirations




VO8
Joan Lurie, 2013