For the last four weeks we have been looking at altering things, specifically through postcards and photocopied pictures. Our first assignment to photograph things generated my favorite photo of botanical growth around stone and pipes. This theme of growth carried over into my mark-making, where I was attracted to little specks of things that move across the format. I am especially interested in the acetate and am excited to destroy more photos. These little marks making up a larger pattern has led me to experiment with wallpaper; I plan to create patterns to destroy because I like the aesthetic of something uniform broken up by a more evidently human, and therefore more organic, mark.
Sunday, February 14, 2010
For the last four weeks we have been looking at altering things, specifically through postcards and photocopied pictures. Our first assignment to photograph things generated my favorite photo of botanical growth around stone and pipes. This theme of growth carried over into my mark-making, where I was attracted to little specks of things that move across the format. I am especially interested in the acetate and am excited to destroy more photos. These little marks making up a larger pattern has led me to experiment with wallpaper; I plan to create patterns to destroy because I like the aesthetic of something uniform broken up by a more evidently human, and therefore more organic, mark.
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