These different images represent parts of me. The top is my face in a park that I love to go to and just sit on a dock and think. In the second image my shoulders are together as they are when you pass a volleyball. It is set on beach which is my favorite place and where I play beach volleyball. The third image is of my torso which I overlaid on an image of the venus de milo. This section represents my love for art. The last image is shows my legs jumping on a trampoline with my little sisters. This reveals the sense of family that is important to me in my life.Monday, March 31, 2008
Self Portrait Project!
These different images represent parts of me. The top is my face in a park that I love to go to and just sit on a dock and think. In the second image my shoulders are together as they are when you pass a volleyball. It is set on beach which is my favorite place and where I play beach volleyball. The third image is of my torso which I overlaid on an image of the venus de milo. This section represents my love for art. The last image is shows my legs jumping on a trampoline with my little sisters. This reveals the sense of family that is important to me in my life.Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Illustrator practice
Tuesday, March 4, 2008

In a recent trip to the Dia:Beacon the artist Richard Serra caught my attention. This was the second time I had seen his work in person and I was as impressed by his work this time as much the previous experience. Serra was born in San Francisco in 1939, and went on to study art at Yale University and graduated with a M.F.A. in 1964. He traveled Europe for a couple years before settling down to live and work in New York City. His torqued ellipse pieces are seen at the Dia. To create these pieces he experimented by playing around with two ellipses attached by a rod at different angles. When he had created the small-scale models of the projects he then had to search for a factory that could create the large scale sculptures. He found a factory that was able to an managed to create these wonderful sculptures that capture the viewer's attention.

In the 1960s Serra had studied contemporary dancers such as Yvonne Rainer and was inspired to use the idea of movement of the body in space. He wanted to concentrate on the body moving through space in a physical way related to the space not completely relying on visual navigation through the space. The sculptures he created capture this idea completely. When you walk around the pieces you feel the pull and tug of space. As you walk through them you are uncertain of where exactly you are and how the shape works exactly. It is an amazing sensation.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


