Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Visual Symbols

 

Comfort Cat
White Air-Dry Clay, Emerald Green Ink, Sky Blue Ink, White Ink, Scarlett Ink
4.5" x 3" x 2.75"





Technoblade Never Dies
White Air-Dry Clay, Various Ink
5" x 3.5" x 2.75"






The ceramic sculpture entitled Comfort Cat was inspired by my own experience with cats. My intent is to visually communicate a feeling of comfort and safety. I wanted to focus on feelings of comfort because cats bring me a huge sense of comfort and I wanted to share that with the viewers. I decided to include a quilt pattern known as the cabin which historically represented home and safety. I wanted to use light blue and green as the surrounding colors to invoke a feeling of peace. I felt the work was not producing the results I wanted due to the ink being too dark and thin, so I added white ink to the mix which successfully thickened the ink and gave it a nice pastel color. I want to keep exploring using patterens in a repeated manner. I want to learn more about symbols with specific historical meanings. This piece allowed me to explore working with air-dry clay for the first time. The making of this work exposed new ideas such as the possibility of using sandpaper on other materials than wood- a technique that I used to smooth out the surface of the sculpture.

The second sculpture entitled Technoblade Never Dies was inspired conceptually by the death of the Youtuber Technoblade, and visually by an artist named Anastassia Zamaraeva. My intent is to visually communicate the concept of life after death, eternal life, and rebirth. I wanted to focus on life after death because since the death of Technoblade, the idea of a second death when a person is forgotten is something that had been on my mind and sounded like an interesting concept for a project. I decided to include symbols both relating to the person Technoblade was in life, as well as those relating to the concept of rebirth such as the ouroboros. I want to keep exploring pieces that are presented as one but have multiple removeable parts. I want to learn more about mythological stories and symbols relating to life after death. This piece allowed me to experience the difficulties of working on a piece that has several technical difficulties. Finally, the making of this work exposed new ideas such as the concept that not all parts of a piece have to be completely visible for them to matter.




    This website goes over several historical quilt blocks, including the Log Cabin, which was used by early American settlers and pioneers who were traveling west.

    This link talks about the history and meaning of the Ouroboros. It is a snake-like creature eating it's own tail, and is a symbol of the life cycle, and occasionally of eternal life.
    This article talks about the many meanings of the Tau- the seventh letter of the greek alphabet. In the symbolism section, the first bullet point reads, "In ancient times, tau was used as a symbol for life or resurrection, whereas the eighth letter of the Greek alphabet, theta, was considered the symbol of death."

No comments:

Post a Comment

A Natural History of the Senses Relief Sculpture

  Mirrors Large Mirror, Mirror Shards, Foam board 14" x 14" x 1"     This sculpture is inspired by a very specific passage in...