Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Have at it.

This coming Wednesday, November 7th, is the date of my Live Art class's public performances. I have two projects planned, one of which has already taken place and will be exhibited along with a video of its progression, provided I get it to convert properly to the correct format for editing.
Still untitled, the performance (on Halloween) involved me in a canvas dress I made, standing on a white box covered in bubble wrap. I provided paints and brushes, some of which were very kindly lent to me for the day. I posted a sign, simply stating: "HAVE AT IT," and waited for people to come and paint on me. I filmed for an hour and twenty-two minutes, during which most of the student body had a go. Some returned later, some only added a little bit, some were positively aggressive in their application of paint, hair, coffee grounds, and more. 

Paints ready to go.

Invitation.

How the box top looked at the end.

How the paints looked at the end.

Front of the dress.

Side view.

Back view, and my favorite part.

Video capture, halfway through the performance.

No longer able to feel my hands, which I have been holding over my head the whole time.

I am very satisfied with my work on this, and hopefully the video will come together. I am unable to edit it in its current form, and conversion of the file type is causing issues. I have another piece planned for the public performance, so I will not be empty-handed no matter what happens. I wanted to share documentation of this piece because it was successful for me, and hopefully others can enjoy it as well.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Spelunking and Cairning

On Friday, our Irish Studies field trip took us to Glencurran Cave. The lecture had involved the early peoples of Ireland, and Glencurran is a site of artifacts and bones dating from the bronze age, and was excavated by Dr. Marion Dowd. This can be read about in greater detail here: http://www.archaeology.burrenforts.ie/Dowd.pdf

The cave is located in a woodland valley. Everything in the little glen is covered in moss and ivy and shamrocks. The cave entrance is gated, and we were lucky enough to have archaeologist Michael Lynch guide us through. There are still bones underfoot, waiting to be excavated and catalogued. Stalactites were forming over our heads and we encountered a few bats along the way. When I say encountered, I mean I nearly strode headfirst into one. Luckily none of them stirred from their hibernation.

On the way to Glencurran cave.

The mossy valley.

The cave entrance.

The mossy valley.

Walking back.

Ivy and moss.

Shamrocks.

After Glencurran we bussed to the site of Poulawack cairn, which was excavated by Harvard in 1935 and is the burial site of 16 people. 

Poulawack cairn.

Little constructions, likely left by Harvard to house artifacts during the excavation.

Another view of Poulawack.

This weekend saw the Burren winterage festival, when all the cattle are driven up into the hills for the winter. Scheduling meant that we were unable to attend the festivities in Carron. We were however able to do a shopping trip and stock up on much needed groceries. And of course there was a halloween party on Friday night, but perhaps that is best left to the imagination.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Midterm critiques conclude, new projects begin.

I went into the studio on Sunday to prepare for this week's all-school critique. The undergrads were on Monday, post-grads on Tuesday. By 4 pm Sunday I knew what I was showing and was completely prepared, which was a great feeling. The walks to and from the studio were just the best. The sun was out all day, no one needed a coat, it was wonderful. I got a good deal done on my next advanced drawing project, the prompt for which is "narrative." While I have been more productive on this project than almost anything I have ever done before (and have a number of photographs documenting my progress), I am hesitant to share it yet. What I will share is the progress on my mixed media project, "beauty." My last effort in that class was for a portable museum of subjectivity, which resulted in a number of pockets sewn onto my window coat and filled with artifacts from home, batteries I have used since being here, cards, books, locks, keys, jewelry and more. Each pocket became an exhibit, which I titled in rather an abstract way, but I am more than satisfied with the result. When time allows I may photograph the piece and share it here as well.

A random photograph of a steatoda nobilis or "false widow" in my window. Non-lethal, but supposedly bears a painful, nausea-inducing bite.

Walking to the studio on Sunday.

Loose portraits from my head, fueling the "Beauty" project.

Snapped these ladies grazing in the late afternoon sun on the way back from the studio.

The critique on Monday was trying. There were mixed results all around, but I volunteered as much as possible and felt that mine went well. Things were said that were similar to feedback I have already received, and all in all I am happy with things. The comment that hit home was when the faculty all agreed the work I showed had disparate styles, and that I should either commit to this strange sort of all-over-the-place-ness or create some sense of cohesion in my body of work. We'll see where that goes, I am not sure yet.
What I am sure of is where my mixed media "beauty" work is heading. I have been doing strange portraits from my head, scribbling all over them with colored pencil, and seeing what happens. I have kept my lines curvy, circular and repetitive, almost a blind contour approach. This was originally a side project, just something to do for fun, perhaps to exorcise something in my subconscious. I did not want this to end, so I experimented today in a similar vein, but using the "beauty" prompt as a springboard. What happened is I borrowed some red ink and looked at a lot of Otto Dix and then poured my brain onto four pieces of paper. I am not sure whether these are just studies or will remain a part of the finished work, which will be displayed in the mixed media gallery show until early December (lucky me). 

Beauty I.


Beauty II.

Beauty III.


Beauty IV.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Massive Update.

Obligatory apologies would be in order if I did not have the excuse of genuinely working hard and having little time to blog. But that is over for this evening at least and I am going to allow myself a little break to play catchup. 
Last Friday saw the first Irish Studies lecture in a month. Gordon D'Arcy introduced the lecture with a recap of his recent travels in Romania, and posed us a philosophical question based on the reading he did whilst away. He mentioned he had been catching up on his Dawkins and I leapt on that conversation like a leopard on an antelope calf (on Monday night I watched the first in Dawkins' new three-part documentary series, Sex, Death and the Meaning of Life. The program was an examination of sin and morality; it was a bit unfocused, and a bit old hat for the initiated, but there was a cute dog). After an hour and change of slides showing the flora and wildlife (plus the fauna now extinct from or no longer present in the Burren, e.g., wolves, bears and the Great Auk), we broke for tea and chatted about natural history and the origins of the universe.

Our field trip took us to the Burren National Park, where we hiked between two turloughs (when flooded they become one and cut off the road) and up Mullaghmór mountain. Along the way someone spotted mushrooms, and Gordon wagered they were a variety of psilocybes, with which I initially agreed. Later research left me in doubt, but perhaps the specimens I collected were lookalikes amongst genuine articles.

The folded geology of Mullaghmór.

Bracket fungus.

Mushrooms.

Not sure about these, just thought they were pretty.

Psilocybes?

Turlough with a sinkhole (the darker area in the middle).

Lacking foresight, I had consumed a whole pot of peppermint tea in the cafe before we left. I waited for the herd to pass and paid a visit to nature in a hazel thicket, then jogged through the mud to catch up. The trail became increasingly difficult, steadily uphill and rockier as we went. I regretted wearing a skirt. At length we all reached the summit, and just as the weather turned. Our group huddled at the top of Mullaghmór, sharing umbrellas and raincoats and sandwiches. Gordon pointed out the house where Father Ted was filmed. After ten minutes or so the rain abated and the sun broke out brilliantly. We were try in no time, but the trail down the opposite side of the mountain was fatally muddy.
I very nearly took a nasty spill more than once. A few people did, and no one really escaped without a bruise or a thorn wound. At the bottom Gordon showed us a famine road, leading to nowhere.

Father Ted's house.

Mullaghmór summit.

Points for spotting the subtle rainbow.

Mullaghmór summit as the rain passed over.

The bank of cloud moves on.

The sun warms the hills as we climb back down.

Another big black slug, they are becoming a common sight.

Cladonia fimbriata, or "golf tee" lichen.

After the hike we were all beat. Lindsay discovered the shop in town makes pizza for takeout, so a bunch of us chipped in a few euro and shared two pizzas. Possibly the best decision of the week. The rest of the weekend was relaxing, no one did much except a few Arcadia kids who went to Belfast. I would have missed Irish Studies for it so I did not attend that trip, but I figure there is time enough in the coming months.
This past week kicked off with a laid back Monday as everyone prepared for the London trip. I am one of seven who remained, and even those few dwindled to three by Friday. The majority of the BCA student body headed out at 4:30 or so on Tuesday morning, and the rest of us headed in for a mini-critique with Martina the photography teacher. The session was intense and one of the most helpful critiques I have ever had. Perhaps it was the questions Martina asked, or the input of the post-grads, or just the smaller group size, but I felt more accountable for my work and inspired to investigate my motivations. The critique took all day. On Wednesday we watched Andrei Tarkovsky's Nostalghia followed by brief discussion. Tarkovsky's work requires digestion, but the film is sensitively constructed and intensely Oedipal.
I did not get very much done on Wednesday afternoon, and by that evening I was beginning to feel the crunch. On Thursday I had a plan. I did not go into the studio but filmed an hour for my live art project. I think it will be obvious that I have never used video before, but as a test piece I am satisfied with the result and hope it grows into something more. I spent Thursday afternoon editing the piece together and doing sketches for another project.
On Friday, my roommate Rebecca and I were the only two left in the house. Everyone else had gone to Cork for a photography exhibit. Only the two of us and a couple of post-grads were left, and we were in doubt about a van pickup in the morning. I chose the long way for the walk to the college. The sun was rising over the Burren and it was the most balmy of mornings. I did not even need a jacket.

Morning in Ballyvaughan.

I spent the morning and some of the afternoon sewing pockets onto my winter coat for mixed media. At lunchtime Jill (MFA student, and the only other one in the studios) was kind enough to hunt down the keys and unlock the cafe for me so that I might microwave my lunch and grab a spoon. I began my next advanced drawing project in the later afternoon. The topic is "narrative," and I am drawing from recent dreams and some images that keep cropping up in reality. The narrative will surely be a bit ambiguous, but so far I am pleased with it. I spent all day in the company of the T.C. (stands for The Cat, in case you forgot), who gratefully relieved me of some bits of egg in my fried rice.

T.C. chillin'.

I cleared this spot for him but he still preferred my lap.

The walk home was another good head-clearing. Everyone was coming home from London in a few hours, so I made the most of the solitude. I biked down to the petrol station for toilet paper and decided that an eight euro bottle of South African red was in order. I made grilled cheese and fried some parsnip crisps in olive oil for dinner. Who could ask anything more? The last few quiet hours were gone too soon. It would be a lie if I said I prefer the bustle of ten other bodies moving to and fro all the time, but the isolation would probably have begun to get unhealthy after another day or so.

I will wrap up with a few recent samples from life drawing class.

Our model walked in a circle for ten minutes.

Thought this was red pastel, but it turn out to be electric pink. I love how insanely over-saturated it looks on brown paper.

Detail I.

Detail II. Trying to force some Otto Dix into my sense of proportion.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Identity project conclusion

We have had torrential rain, and earlier in the week we enjoyed several double rainbows and brand new lakes filling up across the street from Orchard House. I finished my identity project just in time for yesterday's critique. Feedback was plentiful and full of comments I expected, but still needed to hear. I may yet apply some of the suggested changes, but I am calling it officially done. After a morning spent looking at our projects and all afternoon in figure drawing class, I was knackered. With nothing specific due next week, I am looking forward to the first genuinely free weekend since being here. 

Finished drawing project and detail images are below.

Tuesday's rainbow.

Finished at last.

Torso detail.

Knee detail.

Left hand detail.

Foot detail.

Face detail.

Selected small studies I.

Selected small studies II.