the stop motion animation 'The Nightmare before Christmas' and the children's TV show 'Elmo'. I have looked at different ways of conveying stories with images and have decided that a short movie would convey the story best.
Monday, 23 November 2015
Working at Home 2--
Still continuing with the puppet idea I used Friday to create another puppet (and half way through another). If I haven't said already, I basically want to make a short movie using puppets. We have been given a story to illustrate in some way/form and I have been influenced by things like,

the stop motion animation 'The Nightmare before Christmas' and the children's TV show 'Elmo'. I have looked at different ways of conveying stories with images and have decided that a short movie would convey the story best.


On Friday I also continued on with my other unit (based around children's illustration). I was just doing drawings with sharpies, drawing ink and a little bit of watercolour.
the stop motion animation 'The Nightmare before Christmas' and the children's TV show 'Elmo'. I have looked at different ways of conveying stories with images and have decided that a short movie would convey the story best.
Thursday, 12 November 2015
Working at home--making puppets
At college a Friday is a day for catching up with work. For the past couple of weeks I have been using each Friday to stay at home and work on more sculptural works.. things that I cant really leave around the studio. The first thing I started working on was a wooden boat! I have a unit which is basically a story about a fisherman being cursed by a mermaid.. something like that. I had the idea to try and make a stop motion movie! I still had parts of my broken bed from my last unit so I worked out the sizes and glued them together (shown in the picture below).

I cut out the shapes in some underlay over-cut and stuck all the edges together with hot glue. I then cut up an old fleece which was laying in the cupboard (hopefully wasn't in use:O) and then glued that to the head sculpt. Hand sewing in places. I then made a body from yet again more underlay and covered it with fleece.


Covering the hands was
definitely the
hardest part! Way
too fiddly. I also
used the glue gun
for that and attached the hands to the body with loose fleece as arms.
The eyes (for now) are just round pieces of paper with black pen for pupils but I may use something like a white ping pong ball or something! The mouth of the puppet was the reverse side of the underlay cut into a slightly more rounded shape.
the characters and obviously the height
of the 'water'. It wouldn't be real water
but it would be a material which
conveys the idea of water.
I then made another side (exact same size) and a bottom to hold both sides and the front together. As you can see in the picture on the right -> I planned out my next steps by drawing onto the picture which I took on my phone. Unfortunately it ended up just staying as a plan.. I liked the whole stop motion animation idea but I have a time limit to finish this unit and to actually make all the characters and props, plus actually filming it would take way too long! So I did in fact give up on this approach.
As I was working on the same unit (looking at different artists and methods of telling stories- unit= Narrative Image Making) I came across a kids show which was based around a puppet called Elmo. It really got me thinking.. Maybe I could make my own? It felt similar to stop motion in the sense that it can be recorded and watched over again so I got to it. I got two templates from the internet.. 1 hand and 1 round head.
Covering the hands was
definitely the
hardest part! Way
too fiddly. I also
used the glue gun
for that and attached the hands to the body with loose fleece as arms.
The eyes (for now) are just round pieces of paper with black pen for pupils but I may use something like a white ping pong ball or something! The mouth of the puppet was the reverse side of the underlay cut into a slightly more rounded shape.
Final Outcome-
I'm genuinely pleased with the outcome of this puppet! I haven't entirely finished as I do still need to add small details to it but right now I am really happy with it. I'm possibly thinking of taking this route now.. making a short movie using the puppets (making more soon-probably this Friday as it is the only day I can really dedicate to getting these things done!) but ill see how it goes.. something else might come up but until then I feel like this is what I'm going to do! :))
Thursday, 15 October 2015
Linda Lovatt- Illustrator
Linda Lovatt

Now she makes things like broaches, necklaces, free standing assemblages and her new clock works. She tells her assistants what she wants and they help her out. She sells to galleries which then double the price they bought it for but she also sells on her online website. Lovatt tends to use the start of the year (January and February) do find new ideas and plan for works that may take place in the future.
David Cass- Artist
David Cass


Before giving his works away to buyers they are treated for woodworm (occasionally sands it back) but tries to interfere as little as possible saying that he wants the piece to be as natural as possible. He likes the fragile feel of his works, the fading paint, the crumbling. The fact of turning something quite sturdy (like a farm table) into something so fragile and delicate.
Last year he was in Spain and the Almeria Alpine-Desert. I really liked what he done there. Basically its a very hot place and the ground is all dried up. He made a small hole in the ground and poured the toxic type of resin into the hole, this forms a puddle like form in the landscape. I guess the fact that its quite toxic isn't exactly ideal but it does create a beautiful outcome!
Monday, 21 September 2015
Oliver Reed
Oliver Reed
A couple of weeks ago the artist Oliver Reed came into college and gave a presentation on his past and upcoming works.
I love the eerie atmosphere in this painting. Almost like you've just been chased through a wood by shadows and ended up stood in a static position, looking around and have found yourself gazing upon a darker part of the hedges, wondering what may be lurking in that shadow. I think all the elements in this whole piece work together to create the eerie atmosphere. At first I felt it was just because of the darker patch in the centre but now I can see. The lighter, misty colours and other more dead looking plants around it give off a mysterious feel and somewhat a rather calm element in the background. It is when the darker shadow is formed you really start to feel worried, almost as if something is going to jump out and attack!
Sam Cornwell (photographer)
Sam Cornwell-Photographer
Sam Cornwell is a well known photographer and astro-photographer. He won astronomy photographer of the year 2014 with the picture below.
Venus Transit, Foxhunter’s Grave, Welsh Highlands by Sam Cornwell
He uses many different cameras but when asked what camera he favoured he replied, saying he preferred the use of disposable cameras. The fact you don't quite know exactly how they will come out. The idea of no editing or digitally removing anything from the image.


For more information and works by Sam Cornwell visit- http://samcornwell.tumblr.com/
Monday, 7 September 2015
Magazine front cover- Animal Testing for Cosmetics (Sculpture)
Magazine front cover- Animal Testing for Cosmetics
This piece was actually for a unit at college not so long ago! We were given the task of presenting a magazine front cover to the class at the end of however long we had, cant quite remember. I tackled this in a rather different way to others.. At first I did actually have the idea of a flat, normal looking magazine front cover but when I came across pictures of an animal testing protest that was held in a shop window it changed my ideas completely. To the right: The woman is strapped down, force-fed, shaved, humiliated and a whole load of different, ungodly acts are
carried out on her. All to raise the awareness of animal tests and how the animals are actually treated in the labs. I loved how hard-hitting this was! It wasn't just a sheet of paper saying, Animal Testing is WRONGGG! or BAN ANIMAL TESTING! This was straight out there, drawing people in! If no one ever knew what animal testing was or what it was like in a lab, they sure as hell knew now! I wanted my front cover to be like this. I wanted it to make you pause and look closer. I wanted to leave the viewer with at least a little more of an idea of what it was like for such animals in a lab and in this case, rabbits. I was at my end of year art exhibition and I made sure this was definitely in with my other work! I did see a lot of people taking a look at my sculpture but stayed back and just let people make their own mind up about my piece.
together as they fester in the cages. In the end I
ripped off small pieces of the moulding paper, rolled
it up into small dropping like balls and painted then
with a dark brown acrylic leaving only some big chunks. To the right: Probably the strongest part of the whole sculpture. A rabbit being cut open with its ribs showing and the blood everywhere! When you see the entire sculpture from the front you can see all the blood which has poured out and run down the sides. I used slightly different coloured inks to resemble older blood stains from past rabbits. The knife- made from air drying clay and acrylic paint on top. An error which worked in my favour was when I filled the rabbits body with red ink, I didn't think it would come pouring out but it did! and soaked completely into the rabbits head (cotton wool). I actually think it shows more brutality towards the animal and that's exactly what I want to show!
In conclusion I feel my magazine cover was strong in its overall look and I was happy with my outcome. I wanted to show the viewers how animals are treated in labs and just show the pure brutality carried out when animals are subject to such tests. I feel like I did in fact succeed in showing these points!
Mother and Child- (Divided) 1993, Damien Hirst
Mother and Child- (Divided) 1993,
Damien Hirst
Glass, painted steel, silicone, acrylic, monofilament, stainless steel, cow, calf and formaldehyde solution
Two parts, each (cow): 1900 x 3225 x 1090 mm | 74.8 x 127 x 42.9 in
Two parts, each (calf): 1029 x 1689 x 625 mm | 40.5 x 66.5 x 24.6 in
Okay, so in class we were given the task of going away and searching for a work by the well known artist Damien Hirst. We had to find a piece by him and write a report on it..
While scrolling through works of his I was hit by "Mother and Child". There was no question, I had to take a closer look! Its true though. If you come across a picture of this you genuinely cant help but want to know more! I guess because I had done a little sculpture myself in the past, it made me a little more intrigued as to what it was about.
Hirst is known for using animals in his works like in his piece, "The Immortal" where a shark is similarly preserved in a box like structure filled with formaldehyde solution and "Away from the flock" 1994 where yet another animal (a sheep) is preserved in a tank as it were.
"Mother and child" consists of a female cow and its young calf, both split directly in two and preserved in two tanks (each) filled with a formaldehyde solution. According to critics of this piece, Hirst is exploring the ideas of death, ordering the death. My first thought on this (before looking a little more in depth) was the idea of being separated forever, maybe using the animals as a metaphor for humans in some way? It is said that the animals begin to decay before the exhibit is over so they have to be replaced. Which leads me on to my main question...
Are these animals killed for the piece, or have they died from natural/unknown causes? I strongly believe in animal rights so to see a young calf and its mother killed for art completely turns the tables on how I'd feel about this work. When I heard that they replaced the decaying animals I began to believe more in the fact that they are just killed for the work. I mean, its not like he could just wait around for a mother and calf to die? Especially if his exhibition was already underway. People would disagree but I feel that it is just a series of unnecessary deaths. I don't care what anyone else said. Slaughtering animals for art? No. This piece is just a spectacle of human supremacy over all animals and cruelty, more than a piece of art. Imagine it was a human mother and her young baby, cut right down the middle and preserved in a see through tank! He'd most likely be jailed! But because it's an animal its okay? Why can't he use animals that have died naturally or even better, make his own!
I did in fact like the look of this sculpture AT FIRST. It is extremely eye catching and in that sense, works well for the use in galleries, exhibitions etc. I struggled to understand what he wanted us to think about when looking at his sculptures. I guess my thought is that an animals life and death doesn't have any value compared to a humans? The fact he has the animals killed for this use is quite unsettling and doesn't sit well with me unfortunately.
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