Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Dodatek k předchozímu příspěvku

No, a ani vám neukážu, za co jsem to to vyznamenání dostala:) Tedy, ono to nebylo jen za praktickou část, do toho bylo třeba udržovat si i tři bloky a reflektovat všechno, co jsme dělaly.
Tady to je:
Olejové barvy na MDF

Olejové barvy na MDF

Olejové barvy na MDF

Olejové barvy na MDF

Olejové barvy na MDF

Olejové barvy na MDF

Sítotisk a fixa

Sítotisk a sgrafitti


Můj prostor na výstavě se sketchbooky, experimenty a portfoliem



Koho by to zajímalo, tak tady je hodnocení celého projektu v textu, kterým jsem své dílo prezentovala:)
Presentation of FMP – Zuzana Rogers
BTEC LEVEL 3/4 FOUNDATION DIPLOMA (ART & DESIGN)

The aim of my project has changed a bit since the beginning of the project. Originally, I wanted to look at my face as a set of features and simply try to learn to put up with my own face. By having a mirror on my desk constantly, I was forced to face my face, what it looks like and recognizing the tiniest features of it. I thought that would have made me to either accept my face, or start to hate it. 
Instead, as the project evolved, it became not only about the face as it is, the “outside” and me liking or not liking it. I realized that self-portraiture was a very intimate thing and I simply could not try to detach my face from me, my inner self, any longer. Suddenly, the majority of the project became about me. While making the self-portraits, I was not painting them for public “consumption”. I was not trying to share my inner ideas, thoughts, pain. Instead, all they were supposed to show was that I come in every day and I look the same, but I am not the same. The rest was all only for me; the inner struggle while creating them. That process became a way to explore myself more; not only physically by observing my facial features, but psychologically by thinking what kind of person is linked to the face. It became sort of a therapy.
My inspiration was mainly Frida Kahlo, whom I have always admired. She accepted herself as she was in her paintings, and I believe it was a way of expressing emotions for her. Halfway through the FMP, I realized I learnt that I wanted it to do the same thing for me and serve as a way of expressing my emotions (maybe not as straightforwardly as Kahlo´s work).

I have researched many artists throughout the whole project, but as I have said earlier, Frida Kahlo was my main inspiration together with Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Emil Nolde. The reason for that was the fact that they all very well managed to express their emotion in their works. Also, the way that the German Expressionists exaggerated shapes resonated with my conception of the FMP. I wanted to focus on the facial features as a combination of shapes and create a collection of work based around that. The outcome for my practice was a decision to understand my painting as “this is what I saw and how I felt about it”, rather than just “this is what I saw”. I realized I couldn’t separate emotions from the painting of my own face.
At the beginning of the project, I wanted to focus on primary sources. I visited Jan Saudek´s and Tim Burton´s exhibitions and I realized I needed to plan less and be more spontaneous while making creative decisions. I was still very much interested in the shapes and shades, and while doing research on The Bloomsbury Group, I became fascinated by colours and the use of complimentary colours. I expanded on that by inquiring into Henri Matisse´s and Andy Warhol´s work.
I also visited BA Fine Art Painting 2014 Degree Show in St Helens College, which was very helpful in realising that painting is a therapeutical process for some people and gave me more determination to open up more while creating my artwork.
When it comes to the screen printing part of my FMP, my biggest influence were Tracy Emin and Jean Michel Basquiat. Their use of lettering encouraged me to open up more about showing that my work is not just about depicting myself, but also about my inner self.
The photographic part of my project was inspired by David Meanix´s work.

Throughout the whole project, I experimented with many different techniques. I used plaster for “photo sculpturing”, machine embroidery, screen print, sgraffito and paint, all as a part of a layering process, which corresponded with my theme; there are different layers of me and it is only up to me which ones I will show and which ones will stay hidden. Influenced by the German Expressionists, I experimented with ink and gouache technique, which produced woodcut-like pieces. The second direction of my work was oil painting, where I was working simultaneously on six self-portraits. Oils are traditionally linked with portraiture, and it is a medium that allows constant change. That is something that I appreciated, because I was using very bright and unusual colours. That became an obstacle; one day the colour seemed right, and after a few days, I didn’t feel like it reflected what I felt in the photo. Oils let me rework on top of what I´d already painted and build layers.

I have created a collection of work, which is part of the exhibition. I have picked my most successful works, which I feel are results of good research, persistent effort and experimentation.
One part of my work is six oil paintings on primed MDF board. That material produced the best results for me in the past and I simply prefer its robust feel to canvas. I painted all of them over four weeks, and I was implementing all the research onto them. I soon realised that the process of painting was not just a painting; it became more to me and I was very protective over the unfinished paintings. This was not the first time I worked with oil paint, so I did not need to experiment as much with the technique itself as I did with colours and the actual subject of the painting. If I could change something, I would try to create a series of self-portraits painted in not such a neat manner; I would use impasto and sgraffiti more. However, I don’t think I would change the outcomes themselves; I like them the way they are, because I know there was lot of struggling during that process.
The other part of my work is two prints of photographs of my face, which I turned into a stencil by adjusting threshold levels in Photoshop. Before I printed, I painted onto the canvas simple outlines of my face. After the print, I decided to use lettering within the prints. In the first case, I simply scratched into the print (sgraffito), in the second case I used fine liner to write into the light areas.
The only thing here I would change is the size; I think A3 or A2 would suit them better than A4.
All the work produced was influenced by all my research. I was really trying to link the research to my own work and get inspiration from the artist´s approach.

If I had a chance to develop this project, I would definitely experiment more with lettering, even within the oil paintings. I would try to go to London to visit the National Portrait Gallery, and I would also try to look at different ways of approaching self-portraiture.

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