Thursday, 27 January 2011

Damien Hirst

In relation to my project, I have done some research on Damien Hirst. Similar to the concept of my project, Hirst's works examines the processes of life and death, by preserving animals such as sharks and cows, sometimes dissected, placed in large tanks. By preserving these, he is rejecting the concept of transience and addressing the inevitable mortality of all living things.

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Research! Jean Shin


Installations involving deconstruction processes and changing form and appearance. Jean Shin has made use of disposed/donated objects and gave them new meaning by changing their aesthetic quality through mutating, deconstructing and reassembling.

Dress code (2008) 
Military uniforms and citizen's clothing have been deconstructed and made into an aesthetic piece/ installation. It has been rearranged to form a mosaic like fabric mural. This reflects the authority of clothing and how clothing can reflect an individual's identity or status, as well as reflects the diverse community of people, revealing the many faces of American identity.

Armed (05-09)
Similarly, this installation consists of deconstructed military uniforms donated by American soldiers. This has historical significance as it reminds us of the community of soldiers and veterans that have served various wars and that have served their country. 

Penumbra (2003)
Abandoned umbrellas on the streets have been collected and taken apart. They have been reassembled and reintroduced to outdoor elements by threading these umbrellas together to create a large scale canopy of umbrellas, providing a passageway of shade in the park, whilst casting beautiful shadows on the ground.

TEXTile (2006)
Deconstruction of disposed keyboards and reassembling recycled keycaps by embedding them into a continuous textile. This piece narrates its own making as the keys spell out the entire transcript of the email correspondence between the artist and the fabricators regarding the creation of this piece. This piece also allows viewers to participate as they are able to type their own messages on the active keys in the last 3 rows. These messages are projected onto the opposite end of the fabric, continuing a virtual dialogue. This project examines the effect technology and email have on our lives. 

Tate Britain - Naum Gabo exhibition

Naum gabo prototypes for sculpture, experimenting with 3D forms in space
the stringing method
linear construction in space no 1&2 (1942)
Exploring the idea of space and time - he aimed to produce a self-contained object that would suggest the universal and infinite. It hovered ‘between the visible and the invisible, the material and the immaterial’, becoming ‘the crystallization of the purest sensibility’.

Looking at the balance between form and space, what is solid and the free flowing space in between. The strings and the different panels create a beautiful 3D silhouette.

the stereometric method
The two cubes show two ways of defining space in sculpture – one uses solid mass while the other expresses the form’s ‘inner space’. The latter was the key concept behind Gabo’s constructions; he sought to make the space occupied by an object visible without enclosing it.


Torsion (project for a fountain) 1928-36


Creating a sense of defined space without enclosing or delimiting it. The transparent material helps to achieve this. Space and form share equal importance in this piece and is infinite.






Model for Constructed torso (1917)
Protruding and recessing planes that intersect each other to create a 3D female figure with the play of form and space. The structure appears to be light and carries very little weight or solidity as it mostly consists of free flowing space through and around the sculpture. It has a sense of dynamism as volume is indicated through being bisected rather than surrounded.





Art Fashion Identity Exhibition @ Royal Academy

Clothing can represent individual and social identity.  Clothing can be effective in celebrating identity and indicating allegiance or highlighting importance and status of the individual. This exhibition brings together a group of contemporary artists and innovative fashion designers who share common interests by responding to contemporary issues and needs and yet are rooted in history. The artist’s particular interpretation uses clothing to explore identity. This exhibition explores the different interpretations, beginning with recognizing the role of clothing in personal and cultural histories, examining clothing as a form of protection, clothing as a form of political conflict and questions of nationality.

Gillian Wearing RA – “Sixty Minute Silence” 1996
Video piece examining the authority of clothing and dynamic of the group. People wearing police uniforms are arranged in a formal photograph. As time passes by, the individuality of each person begins to emerge as they begin to fidget, diminishing the authority of their uniforms that conceals their individual identity.

Yohji Yamamoto – “Autumn/Winter” from the Yohji Yamamoto Femme Collection (1991-2)
A wooden framework is moulded into the form of a dress, suggesting a human skeleton, an architectural structure and armour. Its shape also recalls the constraining corsets that women used to wear, as well as assorts the strength of the person that might wear it. Here Yamamoto feels the need to regain respect for clothing and promote women’s independence.
 Mella Jaarsma – “Shelter Me” 2005
interesting structural form consisting of a temple shape and mobile protective covering, inspired by the lifestyle and traditions of Indonesia, reflecting the culture of the place in which it was made.  This highlights the symbols of individuality and social identity – clothing and habitat.