Thursday, May 9, 2013

Figure Drawing Final! Spring, 2013

Contentment. :)

Here is my figure drawing final!  I made it using ink and a brush, and little bit of white charcoal at the end.  I love how it turned out!  This semester I have grown so much in my artistic skills especially when it comes to the figure.  I made 300 drawings of the figure just in class! Crazy!  This drawing I wanted to express how I feel when I learn to stop and count my blessings, smell the flowers, and enjoy life as it is and the way God made me.

Painting! Spring, 2013

Painting Paint Tubes

 Marching Paint Tubes

Whim :) (In-Process Self-Portrait)

Yay painting! :D I have a special place in my heart for painting since this is what I have been doing the longest.  If I had to choose right now what my BFA would be, I would choose either painting or drawing.  Anyhoo, here are my three paintings that I made this semester :) The first two are a mini-series representing rhythm through repetition.  We had to choose objects we either buy in the masses or collect, and with paint or any art supply that is definitely true!  So of course I decided to paint paint tubes...I really love reflective surfaces, because those surfaces are where I really get to push the contrast which was constantly drilled into my mind in high school, and for that I am so grateful.  I have also discovered that I love working big which seems intimidating, but it is so much easier to paint the details, and it's just more fun in general as well, and I feel very accomplished when I am done.  The third image is an in-process self-portrait which was my third and fourth paintings for the class.  This is my first ever oil painting, and I have fallen in love!  The process was very difficult at first because I had no idea what I was doing, but once I learned how to use the medium and how it's different from person to person, I really enjoyed learning what my style and preferences were.  So far as the design goes, I wanted to show my personality through the colors, my loose style, and my expression.  I haven't quite gotten it to where I want it, but it's getting there.  I am very excited to finish this painting this summer and see how it looks complete!

Ceramics! Fall, 2012














 Porcelain Family :)
Porcelain Stack!

I forgot how much I missed ceramics until I sat down the second day of class to throw on the wheel for the first time in 3 1/2 years.  I love how calming and peaceful it is to pull each piece up, some working out and some not as much.  I also love getting my hands dirty-you know how they say the bigger the mess the better the cook? I say the bigger the mess the better the artist.  I always looked forward to this class each week.  I experimented a lot with overlapping glazes to see what they would look like when fired, and loved the results.  These images are just a few of the pieces I made this year in ceramics, and they are the pieces I haven't given away as gifts yet.  I made over 30 pieces this year, and I enjoyed it so much!  I also learned how to make porcelain, which is a lot like clay, only a lot softer and a lot harder to work with-and I love it!
Overall, it was a great class, and I can't wait for advanced ceramics next semester! :)

Printmaking, Fall 2012



Roses Painting the Red, Drypoint

Tender, Loving Touch, Woodcut

"I Do" Etching

He Carried Me, Etching with Aquatint


Here are the prints I made in printmaking! The first print is a drypoint, which was the first print that I made by scratching into a copper plate, then spreading ink across the plate, wiping it off so the ink stayed in the scratch marks, then running it through the press.  I wasn't sure how to exactly make the design I wanted, I just had an idea and a few images to combine together and make my own.  I love Alice in Wonderland, and one of my favorite parts is the painting the roses red song, so I decided to create that song with a twist.  After making my first print, it actually looked exactly like I wanted it to, so I just darkened a few lines, and ran it through the press a few more times.  The second print is my woodcut which actually made it into the all student show this year.  It took me all semester to finish this print not only in the design, but also in how long it took to carve my woodblock.  I wanted to show something from my trip to Ghana, Africa last winter break, and I wanted to show childhood innocence and joy, but I really struggled in how to show it.  I finally came up with the image in the picture, and I worked and re-worked it to make it my own, and also make it possible to carve.  I think that print is my strongest of the 4 not only because of the detail, but also because of my attachment to the events behind the image.  The third print is one of the engagement pictures I took of my sister and her husband, and I wanted it to look like a Polaroid image, and also not completely detailed as I've found my style has become.  That was my first etching, where we cover a copper plate in what is called hard ground, carve in a design, then place the plate in acid.  What has been carved away is then what gets etched into the plate, and it is then printed in the same way as the drypoint.  The fourth print is an etching that also has a little bit of aquatint on it, which is the gray tone in the cliffs.  The design is based on the "Footprints in the Sand" poem, and I wanted to show that poem in my own way, because Jesus is a huge part of my life. I really like how it turned out as well.  One of my favorite things about printmaking is how different each individual print can look, and you have no idea how it will look until you run it through the press.  You can also work and re-work pretty much as many times as you want in order to produce the best print.  I really enjoyed this class, and learning the process behind making prints, and I have a much greater respect for master printmakers, because I now understand how difficult the process can be.