Friday, October 8, 2010

Color Theory project, part one!

Part one of our color theory project was to create a painting using three objects interacting, each it's own color that we chose based on color theory. I loved the teal, light yellow and orange color palette, and created a painting of a dark teal bridge/stream landscape, a yellow light source in the background, and a bright orangey red GIANT koi fish. Acrylic paint on wood panel, 2x2'

Surface project #2: Grayscale drawings

For this one, we were supposed to utilize the entire grayscale in a drawing that depicts an emotion. We drew from photographs onto tracing vellum, a translucent paper that was smooth and fun to work with. I took this picture of a little boy at the Schuylkill river park in Philadelphia one weekend when I was there visiting my boyfriend. Graphite pencil on vellum, 9x12"


First surface project: Silhouette



For our first Surface Research project, we looked at Kara Walker's cut paper silhouettes as inspiration to create our own black and white works depicting a narrative. Mine was inspired by the recent passing of a dear family friend. Ink on paper, 22x36"

On Collingwood....

I have to disagree with Collingwood as far as his theory on the difference between art and craft. According to Collingwood, craft is something that is preconceived to express a specific, preconceived emotion. Craft is something that involves technique and skill, in transforming raw materials into a finished product. We can easily differentiate between these raw materials and the finished product. Also, there is much planning involved when it comes to craft- planning is separate from execution and the more planning, generally the better the product will be. So Collingwood says that if the art has any of these qualities, they are in fact, not art but craft. I have to disagree with this, because I think that craft itself is an art- it is an intelligent design and each of the elements of craft (the planning, the technique of execution) are very intellectual and creative. The artist, say a carpenter, must design the plans for the table, experiment and figure out what techniques will work best for the look he wants the finished product to have. I think that the very idea of envisioning the final product and the emotion/look that you want it to have is one of the most important parts of art. I suppose it just comes down to different ways of approaching art- either art is a process, experimental and without boundaries, or it involves planning, technique and a preconceived outcome. Either way, I believe that both of these approaches fall under a very broad and inclusive category of ART.