Sunday, November 29, 2009

Project #6 cont.

The first few photos here are my final luminare. The first one is in natural light, the second in complete darkness, and the third is the closeup of the projected light.



Here is the process of my project. As you can see, I started out with a somewhat wider cube and it was quite flimsy. I eventually get to a longer, thinner, and much sturdier container for the bulb. These are my materials I used when working on the presentation board.


Beginning stages of my presentation board, along with my sketch paper.


The final! This is how my final luminare is supposed to be seen, from below.


As I was working on this project, I had to experiment with the cutouts on the end. The first one I used (bottom left-hand corner) did not work the way I expected, so back to the drawing board. I used all of these, going back and forth with them, closer to the light and further away to see the difference. I finally achieved success when I realized that I needed to be using the 'negative' of the cut out I made, not the 'positive'. That was the best moment during my project process.

This is my final presentation board. After having this suggested to me, I added more contrast with the white and it turned out much better than before.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Project #6 Luminescence




This is my beginning steps of this project. The first page is my idea sheet when we first started talking about it. The second is the cut out I have on the bottom of my box, which I will post soon.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Morning exercise- sketch models

Today's morning exercise was to practice drawing sketch models. I thought I would post this because I was very proud of the way they turned out, it only being the start of my sketch models. Drawing, especially drawing people, is not one of my strengths. But this morning Suzanne broke the process down, which really helped me. This is just the start, but I can see some improvement from the first sketch to the last. I started in the left hand corner going across and then the bottom left. My favorite are the two on the bottom. :)


Sticks and Cell Phones

These are photos from about a month ago. We drew so many, many, many mini sketches of a tree branch (of our choosing) and of our cell phones really focusing on contrast. Throughout 300 some sketches, we slowly combined various aspects and details from each to eventually come up with four final drawings (which looked absolutely nothing like a stick or cell phone!). I have posted here my 8 drawings, final four drawings, and then my four models. The drawings I outlined in red so you could distinguish between mine and the others. All of the drawings were black and white (great contrast), which looked absolutely awesome when displayed. On the table, you will notice, are models. Everyone made four, inspired by our final four drawings. They turned out quite interesting. When we had our discussion in class, we choose a model, sketched it, analysed it, and then tried to find the inspiration drawing. Some people actually found the inspiration one, out of all of the drawings pinned up! In case you were wondering, my teacher, Suzanne, is the woman in the one picture. This was an extremely long, drawn out process, but at the end of it all, I learned to really look and see the details of the most common things.












Monday, November 2, 2009

Project #5 Understanding Dialog

We are still using the 12 skewers and bristol. Tommy says we will soon leave these materials behind, and I'm glad. It has been good learning about these materials though, how to work with them, manipulating in some cases or using the structure they have already. During this project we also learned much about spaces, particularly two spaces, and their dialog. My first concept was 3D and 2D, thinking about an entertainment center and an ottoman, respectfully. But, this sketch model did not convey the use of two spaces very well. Sooooo. I tweaked my idea to form a new strategy, and ideally, a new concept. My new one shows two spaces, clearly defined. It shows destruction, yet structure. You can almost see it as once a complete, sound structure and then it somehow lost that and is caught in the process of decay. It is our class' turn to have our work displayed in the lobby of our building. Our instructors encouraged us to make sure we had extremely nice craft, since it will be displayed. I believe in this all the time, I mean I want my work to look good. But this time I worked even more carefully.

Sketch model

Final (after 2weeks)

Project #4 Unity

Okay, so I have not posted anything in such a long time! Sorry for that. Our past project was to make anything from 12 skewers and 12 4x6 pieces of bristol board. This is my final along with the collage and presentation board. My concept was inspired by the sun, as you might be able to tell from my collage/parti. The skewers coincide with rays of the sun. As for my construction, I crumpled the bristol and poked it through the skewers. That was quite difficult since (if you have ever worked with bristol you know) bristol is a fairly heavy type of paper. Not easy to fold. But, I did accomplish what I wanted to do, so success! The only glue I used was on the skewers on the base to help with stabilization. Speaking of the base, I crumpled that paper as well, to relate to the sphere above. My presentation board speaks for itself, I think. But, I will explain some if not. The drawings I did myself, full scale. They are in this order starting with the big sketches clockwise: top view, front view, and left view. The smaller drawing in the left hand corner is a perspective view of my project. I chose to have this certain font with the letters close together because I believe it adds to the unity concept. I do have a sketch model from the beginning of this project. I will post that soon!