Wednesday, March 4, 2009
February 17th, Eau Claire Art Gallery Visit
While visiting the art gallery on Thursday, we took time to observe our favorite piece from each artist. Here's a quick summary of my observations:
Cal Lane
Untitled (Map1)
Outline is a flattened steel drum
Intricate lace designs, map centered, overlapping grid
Old world feel with decorative lace, like doiley,
Possibly an older version map
The Shadows from the lines that distort the physical image
Amanda Hugen
Contusion
Layers of pattern and designs. Simple lines and shapes overlapping. revealing and covering, Various planes with intersecting forms. Three designs are separate but fit into the form. Excellent colors, muted tones with bold red.
Fraser Taylor
(Black Forms)
Circular forms hanging freely, coiled and loose, not contrived. Physical form and shape as well as form created with distance and shadow, relation to other shapes and relation to piece as a whole. Jagged and raw, messy but intentional. Found objects, black common theme. Linear forms and suggested forms.
Edward Mayer
Drawing beyond Edges
Objects painted white, emphasis on line and line relation. Lines intersecting, looping, crossing, patterns and loose form. Layers of line and shape, repetition and length. Empty, void space just as important as the forms. Dynamic lines, Hooks, loops, sticks, squares, extending lines.
Science and Drawing
My final project came about through quite a process. My initial thoughts were color and food. Why foods are the color they are, how they become that way. Despite research, this lead me to no end, and... it was just too separated from the food itself. Nutrition and the form and functions of food became my focus. Juicing nutrient dense foods produced some rich and bold colors. I utilized this natural pigment and made paper bowls using the vegetable fiber and pure vegetable juice to dye both the bowl and the place mat it sits upon. I paired the bowl with a glass of it's own juice and a wooden spoon. The sights as well as the smells of the installation are more than a give away of the piece's origin. Each place setting is layers of the same food in different forms. The authentic color and natural differences in each process create dimension with texture and line.
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