To finish off my project, I played around on photoshop using different double exposure techniques. First, I cropped my head shot so that it’s isolated from the background (using the pen to select and the refine tool to dispose of all unwanted, loose hair). Then, copying the selection over to my backdrop of images I have collaged, I began to work my two images into one. Carefully using a masking layer on my back image, I finished by erasing, manipulating levels, and then choosing a Screen blending option to create an overall, ghostly blend. On close observation you can identify the images in the backdrop that create a dreamlike disposition.
Finished Skin
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Flat White
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KW Concert
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Studio | Phase One of Portraits
Space & Materiality | Paper Folding
For the first task in the Habitat series, experimentation was taken to a whole new level. This idea of folding paper, that ultimately just doesn’t want to be folded (I’ve become vastly aware of the stubbornness of bristol this week) was somewhat confusing.
But thankfully the whole class was having similar angst feelings about this project. To create a ‘second skin’, using only bristol paper, a scalpel, needle and thread or wire we all thought to be virtually impossible. However, after tedious amounts of folding, scoring, cutting and more folding, i eventually got the Habit of it and began developing my hand. I should also mention the part where i stupidly spent a whole day isolating my pieces… on the wrong paper…lesson to always check the paper LEARNED!
“SELF PORTRAITURE”
For the next phase of our Studio project, we are to create a series of self portraits that conceptually capture the essence of our past and present lives. Closely engaging with the ‘I remember’ list as well as our individual postcards, this assignment ultimately allows us to draw upon both conventional and non-conventional notions of Portraiture to depict our self in a multi-faceted way. Here are examples and inspirations of Artists who demonstrate this very idea, challenging basic ideologies of the way artist may identify with themselves while epitomising how society is constantly influencing the art world.
Chuck Close – I am not trying to make facsimiles of photographs. Neither am I interested in the icon of the head as a total image. I don’t want the viewer to see the whole head at once and assume that that’s the most important aspect of my painting. I am not making Pop personality posters like the ones they sell in the Village. That’s why I choose to do portraits of my friends–individuals that most people will not recognize. I don’t want the viewer to recognize the head of Castro and think he has understood my work
Cindy Sherman– Universally known for her distortion of the concept of self portraiture- utilising costume, make-up and digital manipulation to exacerbate her excessive passion of self exploration and “using my face as a canvas…”
“I’ll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I’m really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are.”
“There’s a theory that there were so many women photographers at the time because we felt nobody else was doing it. We couldn’t or didn’t really want to go into the male-dominated painting world, so since there weren’t any artists who were using photographs, we thought, ‘Well, yeah, let’s just play with that.’ “
Week 3 Studio
This week in class, we displayed our selection of postcards, illustrating ‘How We Got Here.’ This concept was utilised and interpreted in many ways; some demonstrating quite literally their journey through life and others slightly more metaphorically. As my individual transition to Parsons has revolved greatly around my relentless travels and self-exploration, i chose to centre my work around the notion of a physical journey.