Monday, June 26, 2017

Look and Listen




For this project I was inspired by the scene in the first Harry Potter movie when Harry is on his way to Hogwarts on the Hogwarts Express and is looking out the window at the scenery. This triggered my memory to the time I was driving in the countryside of Belgium where there were colorful, beautiful hills. It almost seemed fake because it was so colorful and each hill had its own pattern. I constructed a box out of wood and created hills out of newspaper and moss with a little train window that slides through the opening of the box.

RESEARCH







Expose and Comment






I've been collecting pill bottles for a while now (just incase I wanted to make something out of them one day). I wanted to expose the side effects of Adderall because as someone who is prescribed to it and need its, I actually think it's a pretty terrible drug. I was also thinking about exposing GMO's, high fructose corn syrup and antibiotics given to animals with the pill bottles. I decided to recreate the branding for four products and put the harsh truth behind them on the packaging, still making the packaging look somewhat attractive for someone in a grocery store.

RESEARCH





Collect and Display



I was originally inspired by Atlantis and the theories behind it. I liked the idea of displaying ruins from an unknown world. I tried to play around with architecture and ruins of planes, satellites and ships. But with there being a limit of only four materials I decided to just stick to making ruins. The only materials I used were clay and water color.

RESEARCH

Liu Chen-Chou


Frances Lambe


Mesopotamian Ruins

Risk and Respond



Before I started Risk and Respond I know I wanted to expose yarn in some way. I made organic shapes with wire then wrapped them in yarn completely and left some open gaps. Originally I had newspaper at the top and thought it would be interesting to cover the outside in newspaper and expose the yarn on the inside. I decided I didn't like it so I took it off and started wrapping the wire in yarn, which ended up as the final product.