Sunday, April 24, 2011

MFA Exhibit Dale Chihuly

Dale Chihuly was born in 1941 in Tacoma, Washington. He went to University of Washington and while he was there studying interior design he was introduced to glass blowing. He graduated in 1965. Soon after he enrolled in the first glass blowing program in the country at University of Wisconsin. He continues to study glass blowing at Rhode Island School of Design. While he was there is established a glass blowing program and taught there for ten years. In 1968 went to work at glass blowing factory in Venice. It was there were he observed the team in glass blowing which later became a key component to his later work. His work has concluded over 200 hundred museum collections around the world. He has also received many awards and has created more then a dozen of well know series of his work.
When I went and saw his show at the exhibit in the mfa. One of the first things I noticed was the darkness and how the glass was illuminating in the darkness. The second thing I noticed right away was how big, bright and colorful his sculptures were. His work seemed to be memorizing and almost playful because of the size of the sculptures. I almost wanted to touch or even get up onto the black shiny platform and walk through the life size sculptures. I felt that his whole exhibit gave off this dream like feel to it because of the brightness the sculptures were giving off in the dark and their size. Lastly I felt that there was a nice balance of some of his sculptures installed on these beautiful, black platform and these beautiful chandeliers sculptures installed up on the ceiling.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Artist talk with Janet Echelman

Janet Echelman is a sculpture who reshapes urban airspace with her fluidity sculptures that can hold up to wind, water, sunlight and any other weather condition. She has done major sculpture commissions for the 2010 Vancouver Olympic winter games, a new civic icon for Phoenix and a 160 tall waterfront sculpture for Portugal. Also her art has been presented in Italy, Spain,India, Mexico, Hong Kong, Canada, US, Japan, Indonesia, Lithuania and Portugal. She went to Harvard and got her graduates degree in painting, phycology. After school she applied to seven different art schools and did not get into one.
Her career first started out she was a painter and paint batiks then she traveled to India and came across these locals who were weaving fish nets by hand. So she decided to learn the craft and it was then and there that she became inspired and made her first sculpture. Shortly after her career took off and she soon began to to loose her craft and her sculptures were soon no longer made by hand and were now being made machines.
It was interesting to know that its not her who is seeking out the funders for her projects. It's the funders that are seeking out a certain artist for their projects. She said that you will have visions of what you're going to do but your vision does not necessarily work out all the time. That sometimes she has to adjust her vision because of either the cost or the funders. Since her projects are now getting bigger and more complex she no longer makes her sculptures by hand. Her sculptures are now industrial made. However, she does miss being a lacemaker because of the experience and sense of time she feels when making her sculptures by hand. Lastly a majority of her sculptures are done in the cities because she feels that is where they are needed, thrive a get the most human interaction.

Janet Echelman




Monday, April 4, 2011



I wanted to play with having the figure slowly start to fade out the further I went down the page. The first figure starts out really strong and noticeable. By the time you get to the third figure all there is a couple of lines shaping the form. I did a couple of test runs on newsprint paper before I moved onto the big sheets of color paper. Lastly I played with watercolor and cante crayon.
Here I wanted to play with the color black and other colors. I wanted to play with figure and dress on the same page. By switching up charcoal with cante crayon. I also wanted to pair the movement of the figure and dress up together. Im not really sure if something is standing out to me or not. I do know I really like the results of using the cante crayon. There is something about that color that really stands out to me more so then the charcoal.

Sunday, April 3, 2011


I stumbled upon a youtube video called danza della vergine suicdia. That played images of a women in this beautiful white dress dancing and I just had to gesture draw her. I soon began to realize that I was more drawn to the dress and her movement then anything else. So I decided to gesture draw it with cante crayon and loved the results.