Thursday, March 31, 2011
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Anti Nuclear Propaganda Poster Second Version
The instructor wanted us to redraw the posters at a larger size for critique. I thought the message was being diluted by having the tree and other buildings so they were removed in this version. Critique is tomorrow so it will be interesting to see if the class recognizes the nuclear reactors without the other visual clues.
Thursday: My classmates liked the first version better and it sparked a lot of discussion but the instructor and I agreed later that the revised version was a better design.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Anti Nuclear Propaganda Poster
I was a little reluctant to do a tsunami themed anti nuclear poster for studio art class since Japan's tragedy is so fresh.
I drew the silhouette of a giant wave about to sweep away a nuclear power facility along with a fishing village. The wave resembles a dragon's head as well as an open mouth preparing to chomp down.
The poster was drawn with ink in a sketch book. The goal was to draw a poster that conveyed a propaganda message without text or color.
Monday, March 28, 2011
The Birds by Alfred Hitchcock
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Monday, March 21, 2011
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Twyla Tharp The Creative Habit
I will admit I was reluctant to read this book since I thought it would be about being creative through dance and I'm as graceful as a moose on roller skates; this may be one of the best books I've ever read on creativity in general.
I have a lot to do and since I'm off this week I planned on doing an amazing amount of work. I watched DVD's, Hulu, checked Facebook, redid files, and opened every email as it popped into my in basket. The beginning of the book is about eliminating distractions and that's when I started taking notes.
I'm implementing several of her ideas such as creative pathways and keeping all the project notes in a box. She uses office supply boxes but I'll use the ones from Ikea since I want them be prettier to look at while remaining inexpensive.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Chinese Food Cranes
Friday, March 18, 2011
Ink Drawing of Pomegranates
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Found Lines Photographs
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Folk Art Style Watermelon Painted Cheese Box
Monday, March 14, 2011
The Line For iPads
We didn't choose a good day to buy an iMac. I knew the iPad came out Friday but I thought we would have missed the rush when we went to the Apple store at 4:00. They closed the door until the 5:00 launch and we had to wait with 100s of people for the doors to open. I knew exactly what I wanted, asked the manager to bring it out and take my Amex but he said he couldn't before 5:00. The non iPad group was pretty cranky but the iPad people were very excited.
The new screen is amazing and the speakers are much better than the ones on my MacBook Pro. I was down to 5GB on the laptop and even after putting on a ton of software, files, music and photos I still have over 800 GB to spare. Yay, no more juggling files. I love my new computer but this is my second major Apple fubar in less than 30 days; I expect better from Apple.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Collecting Rocks
We collect rocks when traveling and it can become a bit of a display challenge. This wire planter is perfect for large rocks.
I try to group colors and or locations. These have subtle green and blue shades. The dragonfly bowl is a majolica pattern from the 90s.
The pink quartz looks pretty in a vintage blue bowl. I also fill coconut shells, sea shells, fossil bowls, bottles, planters and a gold prospecting panning dish with fools gold.
Crystals end up on shelves and they are glossy dust magnets. One of my favorites is a multicolored one that resembles the striations in the dessert hillsides.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Carved Wood Fish Folk Art
Fish Stick. I think I just heard my daughter shake her head and sigh.
He doesn't look terribly happy about being on a stick but the pond is frozen solid so this may be a better place to be.
I started whittling when I was a young child and carried a pen knife with me until it was decided a few years ago that all knives were evil. I would sit on the steps and make a big stick into a smaller stick.
I carved the body from pine, the fins are painted metal and the floor is a mess again.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Monday, March 7, 2011
Clay, Wood and Wire Sculpture Self Portrait
I did a sculpted self portrait that captured my essence but not my likeness; a laughing mermaid with wild hair leaped to mind. OK, I don't have a couple of her attributes but the wood was tough to slice through.
The head is made from clay and was fired at a low temperature. The hair is crinkly wire with shells and sea glass trinkets.
The body was made from driftwood which was cut, carved, and painted. She has a charm bracelet since collect charms from the places we travel to.
The tail is covered with scales made from the inside of pop cans.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Snow Crocs Photo and Potholder Loom Rug
I think I know why most people stop wearing Crocs in the winter.
BTW, the rug is a somewhat failed experiment. I made a large potholder loom, the kind you bought colorful loops for when you were a child. I cut old t-shirts into loops but the stretchiness varied too much and the loops weren't close enough in size. This one somewhat worked since they were all the same brand of shirt from the same owner. I haven't given up on the idea yet but the first version with the malignant hanging lumps was a definite disaster. My dog gnawed the lumps off so she found it successful but the missing chunks impaired it's structural integrity and looked dreadful.