Tuesday, 15 May 2012

The final Display



The video of the kangaroos came about after another discussion with tutors and fellow students. Finding the image I needed on u tube, it took skill and help from others to edit the film and then set the projector in the right position to play on top of my work. The intention was to give my design a 3d effect of kangaroos running, using movement. However, although the film was as sharp as it could be, it was still not possible to see a strong image of the kangaroos running, due to the light coming through the silk.  Placing a board loosely behind the box helped block out some light, but it took away its transparency of the veils therefore not allowing the other images to show through.
This is my first time in exploring the design using a box and next time I will endeavour to explore
the final display in more depth, allowing myself more time.  Perhaps, I will take the box away to create more light and transparency and allow the veils to unfold their stories. Or l may  create another story box, using a peepshow with a different story. The plinth is not ideal either, and will need to be cut to the proper size next time. One thing is for sure though,  more research on the final display of the work will be required. 
Below: My finished display



Peepshow and My Display

Initially I planned to have my silk veils hanging up by an inch in front of each other on fine clear wire from the wall  to another wall.( One being a made wall.)  My intention was to let the light through  from behind each veil, so that the  illustrations would appear though the silk like a fragile soft image.  A tutorial with my tutors and other students  encouraged me to look at different ways to display my work. One suggestion was to design a box like peep show at a fair attraction. So my research on peepshow begun. Showmen carried boxes to village fairs into which various combinations of scenery panels were inserted to be viewed in perspective through a hole in the front of the box. These miniature peepshows often depicted major events like the Thames Tunnel in 1843 and thee Great Exhibition 1851.
My aim was to take the ideas and produce a box that could be displayed through the wall.
My box was designed on paper first, then within a workshop on chipboard. It was important for me to get the size right, as the illustrations still needed a little freedom to move around in the box. Initially I was going to paint the inside of the box white, to give a better refection on the silk veils and to make them more see though. However, the box demanded a little colour to pull the colour theme onto the entire design, bringing the design together. The silk veils were placed on the left side, using glue as other mediums failed to hold the fabric up.

Below sample of the box with silk illustrations

Below The A4 hole in the wall was another way of combining the box and all the other elements together ensuring they all complimented each other.

Below The overlay on the wall finished the work off by putting the box into a frame, like a picture hanging on a wall


Below samples of peepshows I looked at for research for making my box.
Fig 1.
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Fig 2                                                                                            
Fig1. Hand-coloured lithographed peepshow in six sections. The cover scene shows the Thames Tunnel staircase with vignettes including the Crystal Palace and Parliament buildings. The influx of visitors to London for the Great Exhibition of 1851 stimulated the production of a vast quantity of souvenirs, including this topical peepshow. The long arcades of the Crystal Palace and of Marc Brunel's Thames Tunnel (opened in 1843) were ideal subjects for the peepshow, a simple optical toy which had first become popular in the eighteenth century.
Image number:
10326481
Credit:
Science Museum/Science & Society Picture Library
Date taken:
20 October 2003 17:42
Image rights:
Science Museum 
Fig 2. ‘Thames Tunnel’ 1851
Other research
Harry N. Abrams, 1998 - Games - 160 pages by Richard Balzar
Look around the room. Now leave the room, close the door, and look through the keyhole. See how dramatically the view of the room changes. This manipulation of space, and the allure of entering a secret world from a single vantage point, explains the long fascination with peepshows. From the 16th century onward, peepshow boxes provided rich and varied entertainment and education for wide and appreciative audiences in city streets and village squares in Europe, the United States, China, and Japan. This is the first survey of this once enormously popular form of entertainment.
Conceived by artists and scientists nearly 500 years ago, peepshows featured scenes of a nation's history, wonders of the ancient world, and panoramas of faraway places that amused and informed. Peepshowmen trundled their boxes far and wide to earn a living, and competed with other itinerant street entertainers for the attention of a crowd, until the peepshow virtually disappeared with the advent of movies at the turn ofthe 20th century.
This history is illustrated with superb photographs of varied peepshow boxes, the pictures that appeared inside them, and a rich collection of antique engravings, drawings, posters, and prints -- many never before reproduced -- that reveal how peepshows were used and the way they appeared in everyday life. Author RICHARD BALZER, a collector of peepshow paraphernalia, provides a lively text.

Introduction of the process

At each stage of my development it was important to hang the fabric designs up in layers or lay them flat on the floor, taking photographs and sketching out my ideas for composition and design of the  layout.  I tried various fabric paints to create a colour palette, using my artistic licence, to  represent the colours of a dust storm. Next I then tried to give my work an overall look, thinking about the negative space and positive space between each image in the design. The outlines of some of the images were also an important factor, as they helped the animals to stand out. 
I wanted the fabric to look fragile and transparent  from a flat surface to a 3d surface that moves and undulates with its own unique quality. Some of the illustrations included finely stencilled details using a flocking technique to provide a contrast and texture. The printing technique is delicate and gives me a more painterly approach to the  textile art. The surface of the fabric that I print onto is manipulated and changed by these techniques. Qualities of light and colour are observed on the land and in the storm, along with shadows, that hold strongly contrasting shafts of light, are explored though these veils.

Birds, emus and Kangaroos in my Illustration

Inspiration for designing the animals came from the internet using utube and pictures along with a visit to Whyalla Zoo, Cannon Hill Animal Park where they have emus and a Kangaroo. The idea was to watch and photograph them and to give me some  insight into how the animals move, so that I could illustrate them in action.

Below are photographs I have taken.


Aboriginal faces

When I was in Australia I managed to photograph two Aboriginal boys for drawings in in illustration. Unfortunately, I could not use their faces in the end, as I felt a need for a more mature  face should be used in  the illustrations. Finding the right image was also a process of experimentation. I found as I thoroughly researched my source, I could also  choose the aspects of the face that attracted me the most which l could then include in my designs.  I also decided  not to incorporate a complex colour scheme and to  keep the colours simple, so that the face was magnified under the image. Although it didn't appear that way when layered in a box, as you could barely see them due to lack of light through the veils. This was a disappointment to me and something to bare in mind when designing my next project.

Aboriginal boys

Photoshop of storm and Aboriginal face

Other Artists influences

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Priscilla Jones


Priscilla Jones: Inspiration on cutting shapes using fabric and stiching:
Chloe Owens: Collage with fabric designs in bright colours.
Afet Halil: Uses silk gerogette pieces, to give a mysterious and sensual look to her work.
http://www.pipjohnson.co.uk/project/afet/
Laura Mackay: Silk screen with a contrast of devor’ed design motif
Ehalill Halliste: Her Tapestry are inspirational for my illustrations 
Alice Kettle: Beautiful illustrations using textiles and thread
Mary-Clare Buckle: Uses insects in her Australian theme called ‘Outback’
ARTISTS THAT USE PEEPSHOWS IN THERE WORK
A Peepshow with Views of the Interior of a Dutch House: This is stunning
Rosemary felt covery: Illustrations of girls in a peep-show

Vistit to Galleries

A visit to the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry, to see textiles and painting by Michala Gyetvai was amazing. She is an artist who paints and sculpts with thread giving her work three dimensional quality. What I found fascinating was the way her work stood out with a mixture of brightly coloured mixed fibres, including silk thread to make a statement. They were  incredible beautiful and inspirational.
 http://www.michalagyetvai.co.uk/


Michala Gyetvai

Lost in Lace exhibition

This has got to be one of the best exhibitions I have ever seen in textiles, some piece were enormous and yet simply fragile and beautiful. The detail in the lace was incredible and so was the desire to produce my own work too, but on a smaller scale, was overwhelming. (Lost in Lace exhibition in Birmingham)
Below are the photographs I took at the show.