Saturday, 20 February 2016

Locating: Evaluation


The Locating unit has been a demanding and insightful project. We have had to keep the 'risk-taking' element from Intentions in mind, whilst juggling 2 projects and underpinning an outward facing approach. I feel the true test of the project has been in the balancing of a prescribed live-brief and working within limitations and towards an intended purpose, whilst also having the freedom to establish ourselves as creatives in our self-initiated projects. I found myself concentrating mostly on the Rochdale brief for the beginning of the project and realised my self-initiated was in danger of neglect; I feel as an artist/designer I'm learning that its acceptable and sometimes integral that separate projects and research spill into and inform other endeavours.

Locating: some samples from body of work
I've realised working with archives is beneficial to my practice, and I think research of objects and artifacts will continue to become a crucial part of my creative practice. This is something I look forward to carrying into Unit X in the 'Imagined Museum' option; appropriation and retelling of objects narratives is something which is a driving force of my work.

As intended, this unit has given me the room to develop my illustrative hand, and I am confident in a style I am developing more and more (like intended at the end of Intentions). In reflection of this I do think my more graphic samples worked best in this project and I'm learning that although it is always crucial to explore and experiment with processes, its important to know your strengths and to play these to my advantage when exploring new avenues.

'Dandy no.2', digital illustration/print
I feel I could have developed my structural pin-tuck work further, and as there was a good canon of related work in Intentions i could have really pushed it in Locating; I feel structure and form are definitely elements I wish to revisit in the next unit and should really consider the possible relationships between my structural work and my more graphic, illustrative pieces.
My understanding of both the Ethos programme, and the technicallities of the multi-head machine have developed to a confident level as it becomes an integral element in my personal practice.

'Dandy no.3', digital illustration/print
This unit has pushed me as a designer/artist and the nature of my samples have informed me much more on the context my work would is beginning to fit in; I definitely see my work in the grey area between art and costume (similar to Shonibare and Velucia) and hope to further explore this in the next unit, perhaps even with a full costume installation for the Unit X exhibition.
The body of work produced for Locating has informed my practice tenfold and I feel confident with a style and aesthetic idiosyncratic to me.  

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Refinement - Self Initiated


multi head design on green velvet

multi head pattern repeated on violet velvet

repeat of head pattern, stripped back
Referencing back to a group tutorial we had with Jane McKetting in the last unit, she informed us that the multi-head is best utilised when you repeat an existing design or alter it in further development; with this in mind I decided to stretch out the use of my head design and produce some samples on the dyed velvets I have accumulated. Following on from my multi-head experimentation last week one thing I decided to change was to strip back a lot of the fill and satin stitch and rely on changing the stitch sequences to double the running stitch sequences with different threads. The multi head on velvet creates a beautiful embossed effect which I'd like to explore further either in this project or the next. I feel these samples fit more into a fashion context than a art/costume directed one, which is something for me to consider in the future.
face design, multi head, dip-dyed velvet
I utilised the design further and explored increasing scale by placing it on a larger piece of dip-dyed velvet, with violet bleeding into a teal green. On the bleed I wanted to play with subtle balances of colour, with tones and shades of the dye mirrored through thread choice. I think the negative space works well, and is probably one of my less 'busy' pieces, which is important to consider when thinking about promotion of my work and intended audiences.

satin fill border, multi head, dip-dyed velvet
I decided to focus on refining my illustrations and see how I could aid my hand using Photoshop. I feel like I have really made improvements with my photoshop skills, and have a much stronger comprahension of brushes, layers and my general approach to digital art. I feel the next step of progression is to continue developing the illustrations I already have with the possibility of digitally printing on fabric. I feel the Adobe touch has brought my drawings further to life and is a great way for me to make key decisions about presentation of my narratives. 
digital illustration, collaged on Photoshop, 'Dandy no.1'

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Refinement - Rochdale

Following my experimentation with parallel devore lines I revisited an element of my previous project, creating structure using the pin-tuck stitch. I enjoyed this sample, but i feel it lost the focus of the graphic playfulness I wanted to explore. I think it's quite late in the project to develop this sample further and I am conscious of neglecting my self-initiated project in the last weeks, which all bubbles down to time-management and scheduling my studio time better. The sample plays with ideas of fragility and form and although I do not wish to focus on this much further for locating it is an interesting process to revisit in the next project. 
devore velvet sample, wire inserted using pin-tuck stitch
Revisiting the quilter I played with aplique and selective placement of wadding to build relief in the piece; building on my previous experimentation quilting I used various rich coloured fabrics and drew bigger stitches free hand giving a much more organic feel to the sample. I can see the sample working well both as a tapestry-like art piece and translating into concept costume.
green velvet and cotton quilting, with multi-head text stitched on dissolvable fabric and hand sewn

visualisation of quilting used in costume context
I've found myself spending more time on the ethos programme perfecting my designs, and when stitching out, playing with the functions and set sequences of the machine. I've found I can achieve unique stitch qualities by stoping and skipping stitch sequences of the machine. I'm pleased with the bold stitch designs paired with the subtle Baroque devore as I start to find a balance between the traditional and the contemporary. 
devore velvet, with gold and purple text using multi-head

devore velvet sample adorned with multi-head stitch


 

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Development - Self Initiated

Im using my self initiated project to further explore my illustrative hand and themes concerning masculinity and materiality. Due to time constraints of completing 2 briefs simultaneously and my interest in the narrative of the jacket consuming most of my time I decided to continue on with my Rochdale research, but to concentrate more on the graphic nature of my constructed fictions.
illustration work in sketchbook, exploration of vibrant colours and motifs

illustration work in sketchbook, representation of ruffs and frills through mark making
I find I can translate my drawings well on the multi-head, which enables me to be a bit braver with the control I have over grounds and stitch-sequences. Stuck in a creative block, I referenced backto work from the Intentions  unit which played to my strengths and decided to revisit my series of 'heads' or faces. I find this is a strong way for me to play with the relationship of illustration and machine whilst a face carries an intriguing invitation to an untold story. 
Using the water soluble fabric again, I played with control of stitch-out on the multi-head. Happy accidents in the form of the middle satin stitch being too big for the machine to create got me thinking about utilising the machines incapability to create an interesting warped affect. 
'casanova' head design, multi head on water soluble fabric

head design, loose satin stitch warped, multi-head on water soluable

Although I'm pleased with the water soluble samples, I feel I should utilise the dying skills I have gained in the past weeks and explore velvet as a ground on the multi-head.