Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Ethan Cecchetti: Monet's Haystacks

The following is my Light and Color project. The idea here was to take a painting that was heavily reliant on color (hence the choice of a Monet) and play with the color and lighting to try to create different feels and different effects. Then I decided to put them together into an Andy Warhol-like image with the different version lined up next to each other.

The middle image is an unmodified slide of the original painting, while the ones surrounding it are all modifications I made in photoshop. I tried to put them together in a way that created one completed image that was interesting to look at as a whole. So, I decided to make somewhat of a progression of colors going around the original. Then, to block out any potential background noise I placed a white border around it with some very simple text.

Note: Please click on the image to see the full size. Also, I added a black border so you can tell where the image stops.



Comments are more than welcome. Thanks. :)

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Impossible project

When I read the headlines for an "Impossible" project, I thought of illusions, and I wanted to do something that experimented with perspectives, lights, and colors. Inspired by Patrick Hughes (see last vide) I decided to attempt some reverse perspective paintings. The process required quite some calculations and thoughts. So here is just a very very simple, basic version of a room:






So the painting is on a 3D surface and the end of the room is actually the part coming out of the frame in reality.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Material Alchemy - Ethan Cecchetti, Ashtin Charles




We made this out of nothing but construction paper, staples, crazy glue, and a little wire (around the center). We folded the construction paper into ninja stars of varying sizes. Then we rolled up a piece of paper to use for the trunk, and then we connected the stars to each other using staples and crazy glue and put them around the trunk.

Hopefully it looks like a Christmas tree.

Ethan Cecchetti: Five Best Pieces





Sunday, November 9, 2008

Madeleine Filloux: Sculptures by Annette Messager

These are some really intense works by a French artist named Annette Messager. I saw an exhibit of hers at the Centre Pompidou in Paris. Unfortunately, these images don't quite do her work justice. She makes a lot of puppet-esque sculptures and multimedia works many of which have moving parts.

This is a sculpture that uses pencils, gloves, and parts of stuffed animals:

MG-Messager-1G.jpg


This is an incredible installation I saw where a huge red cloth spills from the doorway and billows up to reveal grotesque, light-up stuffed animal-type objects underneath:

16-01-13.jpg


Here is a link to an image of a sculpture that you can zoom in on:

Here's another image of one of her moving structures:

messager01a.jpg


I think her work is very powerful and haunting. It also provides a good example of the creative use of everyday materials.


Thursday, November 6, 2008

Zung - five best





Zung - Sculpture





Lego

#15-Momo Ishiguro: Sculpture (?)



SUGAR CUBES!



Homes for Hermit Crabs....Sculpture?



De Minimis --> Substantial Value 
Plus, so illegal






Geoff Mino-- Five Items

I had trouble sizing the images to fit the blog, so you can see them here:

My Five Pieces

#14-Momo Ishiguro: 5 Best Drawings





lucy- top 5




lucy- sculpture: Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen - Safety Pin


this is a giant safety pin in the sculpture garden of the De Young Museum in San Francisco.
by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

14 - Ahalya Nirmalan - My 5 Best




Copy of Oarsmen, 1877 by Caillebotte (done in graphite pencil)

(the original painting)


Sculpture! Dominique Daba

Os1

Typewriter Eraser, Scale X by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen
This is in Seattle (woop woop!) in The Olympic Sculpture Park which is a new park dedicated to sculpture, yay! I just really like how this is a huge version of something small and trivial.

My Five Best Drawings - Dominique Daba








I'm sorry if they're really hard to see....