Monday, 10 September 2012

2012 Sculpture Camp- Camp Kirkalocka

Last year I attended the 2011 Sculpture Camp and unfortunately became very sick and made hardly any work that I relay wanted to make, so when I heard there would be another camp this year i jumped at the opportunity to attend another camp (and hopefully not get sick on this one). I decided to take journal entries and sketches this time at camp, It has been helping me throughout the year so i decided to use it on camp. We stayed about a week at Camp Kirkalocka which use to be a sheep ranch but now is used for mining,campers like our group, and growing back natural wildlife as part of the governments funding scheme to help restore Australian landscapes back to their natural beauty. It took a whole day to get down to the Camp ground which was an amazing experience with all of us art students and jewellery students all hyped up on sugar after our last stop being in Bindoon at the bakery were we all bought extra large coffee's (2 each for some of us) and heaps of delicious hot pies and cakes for the road.
And yes you read right above. we have two Jewellery students attend camp this year- FIRST TIME EVER! and they made amazing works- who ever said jewellery was not an art form is stupid and obviously did not attend this camp.
 We left about 7:30-8:00 in the morning and reached camp around 6:00 on the night time, we were all tired and could of slept were we dropped but we unloaded the bus and trucks and set up our rooms in our workers shack were the sheep shearers use to live whilst during the sheering seasons, before we all sat down and had a delicious soup dinner. We all woke up the next day anxious to get into work but thought it would be best to look around the whole property first. We had the owners Ann and Geoff show us around the property to both the "resource centre" (yes another resource centre which we were all were fascinated with) along with the property itself with its many different landscapes such as the natural clay fields, the water hole/creek, the quartz area, rock pyramid area made by the settlers, and the cliffs area. We all fell in love with certain places and learnt that if something had a red ribbon on it that we were to go no were near it and "DONT TOUCH OR US" it. I fell in love with a huge collection of ceramic power line temperature monitors which we were encouraged to use. I spoke to Ann and Geoff about the old power line that use to run through the property that was upgraded a few decades ago and how it was called "The Grid" by the locals. I decided to do some sketches of ways i could use the ceramic temperature monitors and came up with a simple but effective, free standing grid formation. The ceramic temperature monitors came in three basic styles: just with the ceramic insulator, ceramic insulator and wooden attachment stick, ceramic insulator and metal attachment pipe. I worked it out that with them being free standing in the open field between the house and the creek that if the wind blew them down that that would be part of the work with the old phone line demolished and re-built anew which the artwork would constantly have to be done if it got to windy. Later on after setting up my grid i stumbled (more like tripped and fell face first) over a sign that said "GRID" on it. I could not believe my luck and how ironic the sign was when eventually placed with the work. We had to make a major and minor work so I decided to do some minor works with glass bottle and then some with ash and the red dirt that was every were and in ever ones stuff. I used broken bottle tops which i shoved with natural clay to then plant seedlings into which i then scattered a majority of them around the property before i left due to how Ann and Geoff said how the flowers can only grow in shady areas which in between the glass is a perfect place for them. I then tired some glass fragments to an old washing board so that the reflections of the changing sunlight made the glass shine all different colours and shapes onto the floor and surrounding areas. I then made ash and dirt drawings using ash from the nights fire the night before which we used natural branches from the property to burn. I mixed the ash and dirt together and made tribal patterns into the sand in the area were the ginneyfowl (weird looking chickens, cross turkeys, cross really noisy animals) always hung about and walked through so the ash and sand would mix together and be absorbed into the natural environment again- people walking through the sight as well helped in this process a lot. I made a small ash drawing at first to see if it would work before making the large scale one. The end result of the camp was heaps of people make heaps of works with a lot of them being large scale, heaps of amazing photographs taken, new friendships made, new ideas and ways of working learnt, and most of all we all had a great time and were able to just concentrate on our work for once without the distractions of phones,internet or people constantly trying to contact you, we could just let the site speak to us so we can speak back which a lot of us achieved with A+ grades. The ride home was pretty good as well, quiet seeing as all most of us did was sleep, drink coffee, sleep, drink more coffee when we got back to Bindoon, and then sleep before arriving back at TAFE in perth. I know for sure a lot of us would love to go on another camp but wont be able to seeing as its our last year.....but that does not mean we cant go away ourself :)

Below is a link to the website were we stayed at:
http://www.kirkalocka.com/
"Grid" Sketches- Photograph of sketch book/journal.
"Grid" Photograph
"Grid" Photograph
Photograph of the highway we traveled on taken from up at the "Rock Pyramid" area
Found object Photograph at the resource tip. not touched or positioned in any way
photograph of "Glass bottle's" 
"Ash Drawings" photograph
"Ash Drawings" photograph- close up
Sunset photograph
Sunset Photograph
Open shutter exposure sunrise Photograph
Creek bed, Wind mill, Water tank Photograph

*******2012 fireworks *******

WHO DOES NOT LOVE THE FIREWORKS SHOW EVERY YEAR!
below are selected images from my latest time going to it in 2012
Amazingly bunny ear's do not always ruin photographs
fireworks photograph
fireworks photograph
fireworks photograph
fireworks photograph as it starts to rain
all golden fireworks photograph
all red fireworks photograph
all blue and gold fireworks photograph

Train Graffiti- Digital Images

For my film photography elective we had to choose a theme of our own and take film negatives and then process them our selfs in the darkrooms onto photographs light sensitive paper. For my project i decided to choose the theme of "Train Graffiti". There is an old train station near my house which is used for delivering coal and other minerals all over Western Australia and it is a great hang out spot for young graffiti artist to practise out their work. The owners of the station have also encouraged the graffiti of their train carriages with them selecting well graffiti train carriages to be placed together as a "public graffiti artwork" which the public can see. I decided that although I love black and white photograph that I would also do some digital images as well which i am really happy with. The digital images allows for the bright colours of the spray paint to be shown which adds something extra to the photographs. Below is only my Digital images as my film ones I will post into another blog seeing as i believe both the digital and film photographs both require to be seen separate as they both say and express different ideas and emotions.
Part of the "public graffiti artwork"
Two train carriages passing each other-perfect timing
Part of the "public graffiti artwork"
Part of the "public graffiti artwork"
A huge mass of taggers trying to re-tag each others spaces
The over pass- notorious spot for taggers to jump and tag the top of the trains
Part of the "public graffiti artwork"

Photo's with words

Have you ever thought that even though a single image is worth 1,000 words that if you add text to the image it changes its meaning in more ways than just one?
This is just me dabbling around with photographs I had taken ages ago and thought would be better represented with thoughtful text placed into them.




Saturday, 8 September 2012

Dangan St Studio Work

Last year for my studio class we each got given a map and had to randomly choose a spot on that map to investigate and make artwork for that space. It was part of a public artwork studio unit which allowed us to create work that responded to a space and allowed us to experience what making public artwork would be like. My place chosen by me in my blinded state of mind (we were blindfolded and spun around to choose our sites- sort of like "pin the tail on the donkey") was Dangan St in Northbridge. The good thing with that class was that we also took them site areas into our other classes like drawing,printing, painting, sculpture, digital electronics, etc which allowed us to think about our site more in different ways that just what research alone about our sites could do. In the end after spending months on the Site i realised that their were no birds on the site at all even though on all the the other streets there were always heaps of birds. I spoke to people on the street and found out how wild cats loved to live on that street and apparently were the reason for their being no birds, also how even when some of the house owners owned birds and kept them in cages they all still died due to the wild cats attacking the cages. The space itself had little colour to it as well so i decided to play around with the idea of bring colour and the birds back into the street along with the bird cages that did little to nothing to stop the cats. I made my own bird cage out of material i found around my studio space along with making very colourful birds out of MDF. I painted the birds in bright colours- green, blue, and red- and made them look like birds from a far but when you got close you realised they were just MDF birds. I placed colourful feathers and petals in the bird cage as well as having a lace cage cover to represent putting colour back into the street and the death of the birds. I placed the birds all around the outside of the bird cage and then threw coloured glitter every were due to adding more colour to the street and the shinny object both attracting the birds and the cats to the area. My work explored the uselessness of the bird cage, the death of the birds, the colourless street, and the attraction of both the birds and cats to the site when colour is added back into the street which a few weeks later after installing the work house owners told me that birds had started to return to the area and how my glitter still surrounded the street in tiny crevasses of buildings and drains. The class allowed me to experience what installing and planning work for public instillation involves and how it is not something you can just consider lightly about when installing work to relate to a space.

Photograph of  MDF birds
Photograph of bird cage
Photograph of birds and bird cage
Photograph of feathers and petals inside the bird cage
Large photograph shot of artwork in the site
Photograph of Artwork in the site
Photograph of Artwork in the site
Photograph of Glitter in the bottom of the bird cage

Video stop-animations

In 2011 whilst doing a elective in electronic media i decided to dabble with some stop-animation video work. I created many stop-animation videos with five of them being used as my major works for assessment which I then uploaded to youtube due to me liking them so much and them also showing another side to my art practise which is "I DABBLE" and i am proud to say that!

Below is attached a link to my Youtube channel with my five stop-animation videos uploaded onto it

"Vegi Patch Animation"- its the longest out of the five
"animation-christmas"- playing around with the idea of an edible santa clause
"Rabbits"- playing around with old house ornaments
" Dancing" - playing around with models and flowers
"Dino attack!"- just having fun with some old toys me and my brother use to play with

                                                      Youtube account: RoseEmily1993

2011 Mt Narryer Cattle Ranch Sculpture Camp

 In 2011 I attended the 2011 Sculpture Camp which was part of the Central TAFE sculpture course. We went to Mt Narryer Cattle Ranch and spent a total of an entire week up there with no phone signals, internet, or contact from the outside world so we could concentrated on making our artwork with no interruptions or distractions. We had to make a total of at least two pieces, one being a major piece of artwork and the other being a minor piece of artwork. Unfortunately within the first two days of camp a majority of our group became sick with a really bad flue that was going around before we left for camp (the rain and cold nights didn't help us either) and to my annoyance I became one of them sick people so i was mainly house bound for the whole camp so i got to make little to no artwork. I took a lot of photographs though of the amazing landscape and the other artworks being created along with making many sketches and writing down stories that the owners Carol and Sandy would willingly tell us either if we would pop in and chat over a cup of tea or whilst they attended our nightly meals cooked by us. In the end I ended up dragging myself out of the house to go and collect some native flowers which i started to make stitchery patterns with. I also collected some stone and bones and made a a combination of the bones and stones into ornaments by carving designs into the bones and then attaching the different coloured blue, green, pink, and purple stones to them. These became my minor works which then inspired me to make my major work titled "Ever lasting Blossom". I created it with the intention of making a flower out of re-usable material from the Mt Narryer resource tip we had access to along with making it so that although it would be an everlasting flower it could also facilitate the use of a flower pot allowing living plants to grow inside of it. I used a cement mixer, corrigated iron, the natural red dirt, and the natural wild flowers to create my major art piece. I would of loved to make more work but was determined that on the next sculpture camp i would attend that i would make a bigger major work and experiment more with the actual making of the artwork rather than the research side, I was determined to let the site speak to me more the next time I attended. Over all i was really happy with my results at this camp and eager to get into my work back at Central TAFE along with eager to attend another camp.

Catalouge photo of works from the entire camp
Photograph taken at camp
"Ever Lasting Blossom" photograph
Sunset photograph at camp
"Ever Lasting Blossom" Photograph
Natural Flowers found on camp used to make stitchery with Photograph
Group dinner conversations camp photograph
Sunset camp Photograph