Wednesday, 18 March 2015
Brainstorming
Today in class we are brainstorming on how we think we should build our final product.
Tuesday, 17 March 2015
Work with class cont.
This is another one and the top photo again is once again what was left when it was our turn to add our own stuff. In the top thorp where you see a big flower I had added that in earlier in the week and I'm the second photo I had to rethink about the flower that we can't Actually find a huge flower so I decided to draw the flower mad out with wire.
Thursday, 12 March 2015
Work in progress (photography and art cont.)
This is a different one and I'm still working with the flax. I put full flax on the straight timber side and streaded it a little bit.
Work in progress (photography and Art students)
The top photo is when my group and I got the drawing and the bottom on is where we added our own work in. In the bottom one I added and darkened the petal looking things, which is flax going around the timber and shading and putting shredded flax down the other side of the same triangle, of the flax going through the timber.
Tuesday, 10 March 2015
-Anthony Caro-
Anthony Caro was born in New Malden, England and is the youngest of three and who comes from a Jewish family. Caro went to school at Charterhouse School where he was introduced to Charles Wheeler by his housemaster. Came the holidays Caro studied at the Farnham school of arts and then went to the University for the Creative arts and used to work in Wheelers studio. Later after that, he then earned a degree in engineering at Christ College, Cambridge.
Caro encountered modernism, when he was working as an assistant to Henry Moore in the 1950s. Later on being introduced to American sculptor David Smith in the 1960s, he then abandoned his work he did earlier and started constructing sculptures by welding or bolting together pieces of steel, such as I-beams, steel plates and also meshes. When the piece is done, it is usually painted in bolted flat colour.
Caro encountered modernism, when he was working as an assistant to Henry Moore in the 1950s. Later on being introduced to American sculptor David Smith in the 1960s, he then abandoned his work he did earlier and started constructing sculptures by welding or bolting together pieces of steel, such as I-beams, steel plates and also meshes. When the piece is done, it is usually painted in bolted flat colour.
-Alice Aycock-
Alice
Aycock was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, November 20 1946. Aycock studied at
Douglass College in New Brunswick, New Jersey and she graduated with a Bachelor
of Arts degree in 1968. After Aycock graduated with her degree, she then moved
to New York to do hew masters at Hunter College, where she was supervised and
taught by Robert Morris and graduated in 1971s with her masters. Aycock's early
sculptures were site-specific and were made from wood and stone and then later
on in 1980s she used steel.
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