ME – Part. 2

30 Aug 2016

Everyone around you has a past that’s unknown to you. It differs for each individual, as they have their own version of events. This, is my version: “ME – Part. 2.”


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This playground was the usual hangout place with my family and friends since young. After school, during lantern festival, etc. we will go to this playground to play or celebrate festivals.

I like to sit on that swing when I was young, and swing myself up high. There was once, while I was sitting on it, a kid walked in front of me, and I flew out from the swing. Luckily and miraculously, I wasn’t injured. At then, the playground was still the old sand playground. Years after, they renovated this playground. Whenever I pass by this place, I felt sad as the place wasn’t how it was in my childhood memory. The facilities wasn’t taken care of, swing is being destroyed by the kids. People seldom visit this place as much as it was in the past anymore.

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This is my old house’s void deck. Here, I once received a hand-written letter from my primary school friend before we went to different secondary schools. She personally dropped it in my mailbox and told me to pick it up. I truly felt touched by this little act, which is memorable for me till today. 

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My late grandma likes to sit at this corner in the past and chit chat with her friends. Using the lighting, I captured the area to show warmth and the resemblance of her at that place. However, she is not there anymore.

Reference

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Nguan

I referenced to Nguan’s photo for heartland areas photography. I like how he showed the liveliness of the place in his photos. 

This is the end of “ME”.

Till next post! Ciao!

ME – Part. 1

30 Aug 2016

Everyone around you has a past that’s unknown to you. It differs for each individual, as they have their own version of events. This, is my version: “ME – Part. 1.”


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This series of photographs depicts the time when i just shaved my hair.

On 26 July 2014, I shaved my hair for hair for hope, and lived being bald for some time. At the start, I wasn’t really comfortable with people glancing at my bald head. Sometimes, I would wear my beanie to cover up. Even when I wear my beanie, the glances are still there. I felt like hiding myself in my own shell, segregating myself from the world. When I look in the mirror, I miss myself without hair, but I don’t regret at all.

In fact, through this experience, I was able to know how cancer patients felt when strangers look at them. The gazes, the stress and their own illness they had to deal with. Although I did not feel the part on illness, but the gaze and stress were heavy to me. I know that sometimes people weren’t actually gazing at me, but you will have that feeling as though the strangers are looking at you. I think that the cancer patients do feel that way too. 

This is a memorable experience for me, and it brought a different view to my life.

Reference

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Nan Goldin

I referred to Nan Goldin’s work for one of my shots. I like how she framed her shot and the emotions that were depicted through her work. The lighting guided the audience to look at the main subject, and the background does not steal the limelight of the subject.

This is the end of my Part.1.

Till next post! Ciao!

ONGOING

26 Aug 2016

If you had to film a story about yourself, what would be your story? This is my version of it. Presenting to you: “Ongoing”.


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Title: Ongoing

Genre: Biography, Drama

Date of Release: Unable to determine

Synopsis: As this film is still ongoing, so there isn’t a synopsis for you.


Concept:

My life is an ongoing construction. I’ve carved and walked different path than the norms. I’ve went through longer roads and seen different scenery. Some are memorable and some are lessons learnt. This “construction” of life is a never ending road for everyone of us, for our next step is what we are carving right now.

Colour:

I chose a lighter colour scheme to show the infinite possibilities and hope in life. I’m also quite an optimistic person, so brighter shades is more suitable.

Venue:

I needed a grunge texture for my poster background, to portray the construction concept. My classmate suggested that I took it at our school’s entrance. I thought it suits too, so my poster venue is: ADM’s entrance!

That’s all for the film poster of me.

Till next post! Ciao!

3D Animal Model

24 Aug 2016

Today, we were tasked to piece up the scrap materials we bought and brought into an animal of choice. I did not have enough materials to start. But my kind classmates gave me items that they did not use to me. So thankful to them for their materials. 

I had an idea block while looking at the materials I had. One of my classmates inspired me for the animal featured below.

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Animal #1

Can you identify what it is?

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Animal #2

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Side View

This was an eye-opener to me, as I’ve never piece up items in this way before. I can feel the achievement when my classmates and Peter guessed my animal.

Till next post! Ciao!

Hardware Shopping

17 Aug 2016

Material Sourcing

Intended to visit the Thievves Market. In the end, we knew that it doesn’t open till 1pm. Since so, we just improvised and visited the hardware shop next to the Thievves Market.

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Interesting items sold there. Bought an item for my 3D model. Hope it’s sufficient.

Till next post! Ciao!

Searching for Perspective

23 Aug 2016

Perspective sets our eyes to see different dimensions, and due to that, various vanishing points are seen.


Class activity of the day: Take photographs ft. perspective.

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Viewing in perspective forces my eyes to see where the vanishing points are. Sometimes its confusing, as I’m unable to depict where the vanishing points are for curved areas. It confuses my eyes. yell

Till next post! Ciao!

Visual Exploration

16 Aug 2016

We were given some time to explore for the assignment. I decided to grab the DSLR and capture our daily occurrence.


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I discovered that darkening the image creates defined lines for architectures, allow the viewers to see the symmetry.

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Most of my images are quite dark, to focus more on the subject than the surroundings. Overall, it is a fun exploration.

Till next post! Ciao!

Mono-Printing Session

18 Aug 2016

I think i fell in love with Mono-Printing! First time crafting and printing on my own, and it gave me surprises for every piece of my work.


Trying out my first Mono-Print craft.

First attempt: It didn’t turn out that nice. Pretty flat.

Second Attempt: Created too many marks on the Lino cut, resulted in ill-balance of negative space and positive space on the newsprint. frown

Third attempt: This was pretty ok, just the leaves result in a large blank space on the newsprint.

My partner for the day! (People say we look alike.)

Fourth Attempt: Tried using different techniques and lesser mark-making tools.

Last attempt: Scribbled on the Lino-cut and used cling wrap on some parts. Looks like a graffiti work! HAHA!!

Till next post! Ciao!

The Making of Mark Making Tools

Had to make Mark Making tools for Project 1. It’s a new experience for me as this is my first time doing it.


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Felt like a botanist, picking up all these fallen leaves and twigs.

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(For earthy texture)

Hope these turns out nice on paper.

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(For details)

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(For Abstract look)

Trimmed the brush tips for these two brushes.

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(For Messy lines)

Added pressure on this brush to make the tip looser and wider.

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(For Grungy & Airy texture)

Can’t wait to see how my Mark Making tools turn out during the Mono-print session.

Till next post! Ciao!

Mark Making Research #1

First lesson of Foundation 2D mentioned Mark Making.

First Thought: WHAT IS THAT?! O.O


Mark making is a term used to describe the different lines, patterns, and textures we create in an artwork. It applies to any art material(s) we use on any surface(s), not only paint on canvas or pencil on paper.

Mark Making techniques:

Medium & Tools examples:

So basically we can use almost anything to do an art piece. Some artists reference were given to do a research.


  • Ed Moses Drawings from 1960 and 70s

Ed Moses has been a significant figure in the development and history of art in Los Angeles since his first monographic exhibition at the Ferus Gallery in 1958. His unconventional materials and techniques led him to a unique mode of expression grounded in graphic experimentation, which included large floral graphite drawings from the 1960s to his signature diagonal grids of the 1970s.

“Moses’s commitment to drawing suggests an assertion of the handmade in the face of pervasive technological growth and development,” said Leslie Jones, curator of Prints and Drawings at LACMA. “He proclaimed drawing’s viability as a medium of exploration and innovation, even at the most unlikely time and place, helping to establish drawing as a medium with a future as well as a past.”

Chrysanthemum Diptych from 1961 is Moses’s first works centered on a floral motif.

Ed Moses, Rose Screen, 1963

Moses’s selection of the flower as a pattern, however, was less about its connotations than its inherent potential for repetition, which provided a template for his mark making. Moses’s drawings seem to be perpetually in progress. This unfinished quality also characterizes his approach to displaying artwork.

Moses’s interest in the geometry of the grid may also relate to his exploration of architecture, which led to the construction of buildings in the mid-1960s, as well as the “deconstruction” of Mizuno Gallery in 1969. In that pioneering installation piece, Moses removed part of the wall and gallery roof, exposing the wood slats so light could make diagonal patterns on the floor and walls.

Diagonal grids dominate in Moses’s work beginning in the mid-1970s. The grids, whether ink on paper or acrylic on canvas, were executed with the same tools and methods of chance and repetition that characterized his drawings of the ’60s. Since then, Moses has constantly altered his aesthetic, experimenting with assemblage, installation, and printmaking, and exploring new techniques and materials.


  • Sol Lewitt “Scribbles”

LeWitt is regarded as a founder of both Minimal and Conceptual art. His prolific two and three-dimensional work ranges from wall drawings (over 1200 of which have been executed) to hundreds of works on paper extending to structures in the form of towers, pyramids, geometric forms, and progressions.

LeWitt’s works embody his guiding principle that “once the idea of the piece is established in the artist’s mind and the final form is decided, the process is carried out blindly.”

In 2005 LeWitt began a series of ‘scribble’ wall drawings. The scribbling occurs at six different densities, which are indicated on the artist’s diagrams and then mapped out in string on the surface of the wall. The gradations of scribble density produce a continuum of tone that implies three dimensions. According to the principle of his work, LeWitt’s wall drawings are usually executed by people other than the artist himself.

The wall drawings, executed on-site, generally exist for the duration of an exhibition; they are then destroyed, giving the work an ephemeral quality.


  • Gunpowder Drawings by Cai Guo-Qiang

Cai initially began working with gunpowder to foster spontaneity and confront the suppressive, controlled artistic tradition and social climate in China. While living in Japan from 1986 to 1995, Cai explored the properties of gunpowder in his drawings, an inquiry that eventually led to his experimentation with explosives on a massive scale and the development of his signature “explosion events”. In 1995, he moved to New York with a grant from the New York-based Asian Cultural Council, an international organization that promotes artistic exchanges between Asian countries and the United States.

A very lengthy first post!

Till next time! Ciao!