Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Thread/Yarn/Fabric
Transparent/Layers
Tinted
12.5” x 9.5”
Cardboard, colored pencil, highlighter
A quiet moment
8.5” x 12”
Cardboard, gouache, paint markers, ink pens, plastic, glue
Specter
9.5” x 7”
Paper, gouache, colored pencil, paint marker, tissue paper, glue
Drawings in response to found objects
Thursday, September 19, 2024
Drawing on objects
Clip Studio Paint, makeup
Flesh
Rainy day fun
paint markers
Property of
paint marker, bike
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Cardboard
Garbage Critter
Gouache, paint markers, paper
14.5” x 11”
UPS: Universal Postal Service
Gouache, paint markers, cardboard, glue
15” x 10”
Garbage Critter is a playful look at how individuals discard common cardboard boxes after a single use, despite it still being functional. Wild animals often find human trash to be quite useful and crucial to their survival in our mostly urban or suburban institutions. We commonly view racoons, rats, or possums as pests and disturbances to our communities despite the fact that us humans are the ones invading their homes.
With the rise of online shopping and companies like Amazon, packages and mailing have become extremely prevalent in our day-to-day lives. You can order clothes, furniture, or even groceries and they will appear on your doorstep within 24-hours. Reflecting on our current postal system got me thinking about the future of mail and the possible advancements in the industry. It seems a little silly to think of a future where we can mail things to the moon, but with space travel becoming more accessible to those outside of the science world, it's not far-fetched to say that UPS could have a mail spaceship in the next 50 to 100 years.
Wild Girl!
Gouache, paint markers, hot glue, cardboard
9" x 13"
Patterns!
Gouache, paint markers, ink pens, parchment paper, cardboard
9.5” x 12”
Man made landscape
Gouache, cardboard, paper
9.5” x 12”
With the final three pieces above, I experimented with all the different ways in which cardboard could be used to make art. We do not often realize how versatile the material is in purposes other than mailing or continuing objects. For Wild Girl! I utilized stacking/layering to achieve a three dimensional effect, as if the character is popping out at you. When you remove the outside layers of paper on cardboard it reveals a unique striped pattern that is perfect for making prints. Both Patterns! And Man made landscape feature printing techniques, however applied very differently. To create the isolated patterns seen on Patterns! I traced the outline of the chosen garments on a piece of parchment paper then cut them out, creating a stencil. Conversely, I took a more loose and free approach, just stamping the cardboard wherever I saw a need for texture, not worrying about the patterns overlapping or blending together.Ceiling to floor piece
Female Gladiator
Paper, charcoal, soft chalk pastel, tape
101” x 56”
Although she is quite an intimidating woman, it is fun to stand next to the piece and pretend to be attacked.
Multiple Panel
Babygirl Artist statement My collection titled Babygirl is a commentary on the harassment of women, especially those in the spotlight or...
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Female Gladiator Paper, charcoal, soft chalk pastel, tape 101” x 56” When tasked with the challenge of creating a piece that spanned from ...
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Garbage Critter Gouache, paint markers, paper 14.5” x 11” UPS: Universal Postal Service Gouache, paint markers, cardboard, glue 15” x 10” ...
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My main inspiration is old Hollywood and starlets of the 1950s, like Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, and Dorothy Dandridge. I want to explo...