Thursday, 17 March 2016

Evaluation


Evaluation
My initial idea was based around bringing awareness to the benefits of using solar power as our main resource of power as i wanted to highlight the issues of having a world powered by unsustainable energy sources. As I began researching I found the I was inspired by fossil fuels and the disadvantages of using them as our main energy source. [1]The fossil fuels are coal, oil and natural gas. They are fuels because they release heat energy    when they are burned. They are fossil fuels because they were formed from the remains of living organisms millions of years ago. The disadvantage of using fossil fuels as our main energy source is that fossil fuels are nonrenewable energy resources. Their supply is limited and they will eventually run out. Fossil fuels do not renew themselves, while fuels such as wood can be renewed endlessly. Fossil fuels release carbon dioxide when they burn, which adds to the greenhouse effect and increases global warming.
Fossil Fuels.jpg[2]      Of the three fossil fuels, for a given amount of energy released, coal produces the most carbon dioxide and natural gas produces the least. Coal and oil release sulfur dioxide gas when they burn, which causes breathing problems for living creatures and contributes to acid rain. About three-quarters of the electricity generated in the UK comes from power stations fuelled by fossil fuels. This means that we are living in a world that is running on a source that isn’t recyclable, once it’s gone then it’s gone forever and while we are still using fossil fuels our world isn’t sustainable so the way we live our lives needs to change.

To help me understand how other artists have highlighted these problems I have chosen to research Brian Borrello. [3] Brian Borrello is a visual artist, designer, educator and public artist. His experience with a broad array of sculptural and graphic techniques, and a versatile range of conceptual approaches is evident in his paintings, sculptures and public art pieces. As a visual artist, Brian is particularly interested in creating awareness of human life in balance with other life forms and with our shared environment. In his art for the public realm, he seizes opportunities to make 'places' by activating urban spaces through image, form and symbol, in response to history, community and context. [4] Brian Borrello's Silicon Forest (2003) is an abstract sculpture made of stainless steel and light-emitting diode (LED) lights, installed at the Interstate/Rose Quarter MAX Station in Portland's Lloyd District. It depicts a series of trees with thin trunks and cone-shaped foliage.The piece has been called a "three-part metaphor for displacement and change".The solar artwork's steel trees illuminate using electricity powered by solar panels.
Brian Borrello.jpgThe rich green graduating colour visually communicates the ecological benefits of the sculpture and its animated, ethereal design with proportions gives it a cartoon-like feel to it. The sculptures grandeur gives the feeling of being a creature or insect walking through fields as if you’re in a sort of wonderland making it feel other worldly. In my opinion it’s a very organic and elegant piece of art that shows solar power at its best.
[5]

From exploring Brian Borrello I decided to try and use as many sustainable products in the work and research as much as possible as a starting point as my primary exploration of my final piece. I chose this because using materials that can be recycled and that are renewable is an important part of keeping our world sustainable; I have explored this idea by using processes and materials such as, charcoal, recycled wood and the anthotype method of printing. While doing this I was inspired by how solar energy and other sustainable materials can be used to print and image through using the anthotype technique. An anthotype is an image created using photosensitive material from plants and when placed with an emulsion it creates an image. This is a cheaper, more sustainable alternative to printing flowers or plant matter on a computer, also it looks a lot more interesting. For my weaving I used recycled wood from a broken tree for my frame, as well as that the materials I used for weaving were all recycled materials, so instead of a plastic bag sitting on a landfill site for years of even worse it going into the sea it is now part of my weave. I aimed to work with a lot of recycled materials for this project to get a feel as to how life will hopefully change in the future as we become a more cautious society in regards to how we power our lives.
My successes of this project have been being able to experiment with new materials, I was able to use recycled and environmentally friendly products which i'd never though of using before and i would definitely use them again. Another success has been my book, a lot of the time I struggle with making a book that is concise and has the same common theme running through it and this time I feel as though I've managed to do that. My final success was probably the life drawing, I feel as though I learnt a lot this time and I think that that shows in my pictures as the development from when I last did life drawing is fairly substantial and i'm proud of those drawings. Having looked at all my successes I also realize that there are targets I need to set myself in order to enable development, time management is a big problem for me and I believe that if i can find a way to structure my time better than I would be able to produce a more fluid project. Also I find it difficult to complete all of the tasks to my best ability so sometimes my work doesn't come out the way that I hope. If I am able to resolve these issues then I think my work would be of a higher standard.

Megan Chilcott
[5] (image) http://cleantechnica.com/2013/05/08/11-must-see-art-installations-inspired-by-solar-panels/

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

The Future- Brian Borello






Brian Borello

[1] Brian Borrello is a visual artist, designer, educator and public artist. His experience with a broad array of sculptural and graphic techniques, and a versatile range of conceptual approaches is evident in his paintings, sculptures and public art pieces. As a visual artist, Brian is particularly interested in creating awareness of human life in balance with other life forms and with our shared environment. In his art for the public realm, he seizes opportunities to make 'places' by activating urban spaces through image, form and symbol, in response to history, community and context.


The Silicon Forest (2003)
[2] Brian Borrello's Silicon Forest (2003) is an abstract sculpture made of stainless steel and light-emitting diode (LED) lights, installed at the Interstate/Rose Quarter MAX Station in Portland's Lloyd District. It depicts a series of trees with thin trunks and cone-shaped foliage.The piece has been called a "three-part metaphor for displacement and change".The solar artwork's steel trees illuminate using electricity powered by solar panels.
The rich green graduating colour visually communuicates the ecological benefits of the sculpture and its animated, ethereal design with proportions gives it a cartoon-like feel to it. The sculptures grandeur gives the feeling of being a creature or insect walking through fields as if you’re in a sort of wonderland making it feel other worldly.



The Future- Project Proposal

NAME: Megan Chilcott
CONTACT: mchilcott1@pca.ac.uk
Project Proposal
26th February 2016

I have selected Regen SW as my project brief. I have chosen this project because sustainable energy is a subject that interests me and relates to my life. I believe that I can find a way to engage and inform an audience about sustainable energy and its benefits. I am inspired by Regen SW and their ability to educate people and being sustainable through their inspiring posters, art and musicals.
I hope to create a piece of art that is able to stimulate and engage an audience but most importantly I hope to inform viewers about the positives of using renewable energy sources. I would also like to make people aware of the problems of having a predominantly fossil fuel run economy.
I will ensure that i will submit a 2D piece with the specification of 300mm(w)x450mm(h) although I wouldn’t like to place myself in a box with these specifications as I may want to create a 3D piece and submit it in a 2D format in order for it to be able to be an advertisement on a bus stop. I will hopefully use mostly sustainable materials in order to create something that doesn’t only have a message but is a message. I aim to complete this project before Wednesday 9th March 2016 as that is my deadline.

I would appreciate it if you could schedule some to deliver feedback on this project with me via my email address.
Contact Details:
Megan Chilcott
mchilcott1@pca.ac.uk


Contextual Studies

Contextual Studies


Carlos Acosta- explains his background in Cuba and what ballet school meant to him. He explains the poverty in Cuba. It is hard to imagine that someone from this background would rise to become the world's leading male ballet dancer, when ballet is normally regarded as elitist and only for the well educated and well to do.





David Bowie- died peacefully on the week of 11th January 2016. The influential singer-songwriter and producer excelled at glam rock, art rock, soul, hard rock, dance pop, punk and electronica during his eclectic 40-plus-year career. He just released his 25th album, Blackstar, Bowie's artistic breakthrough came in the 1972's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, an album that fostered the notion of rock star as space alien. Fusing British mod with Japanese kabuki styles and rock with theatre, Bowie created the flamboyant, androgynous alter ego Ziggy Stardust.

L.S Lowry- Lowry's paintings are silently polulated with anonymous figures whose sole purpose seems to be the embodiment of the life's existential mechanics. Lowry's characters are as much representative of human emotions as they are of the city's industrial surroundings: they perambulate the streets going about their daily routine while remaining un-involved with each other and the objects that surround them. And yet, the mere presence of these figures suggests a powerfully
emotional sense of purpose and hope for individual lives and collective existence.

Annie Leibovitz- Photographer to the stars Annie Leibovitz has been recruited to photograph some huge celebs for Disney World's Year of a Million Dreams campaign. So far she's turned Scarlett Johansson into Cinderella (with the help of a Harry Winston's $325,000 tiara), Beyonce into Alice in Wonderland, and David Beckham into a prince (2007). Popular culture transformed into aesthetic pieces.


Georges-Pierre Seurat - A Sunday on La Grande Jatte (1884)
This park scene may hold hidden sex workers. The titular locale was a favourite of prostitutes on the prowl, so some historians suspect that fish are not what the fishing-pole-toting waman on the left was hoping to hook. The same speculation has arisen around the lady on the right, with a monkey on a leash and a man on her arm. It's one of the most reproduced and parodied paintings in the world. It's been parodied by Sesame Street, The Simpsons and the American version of The Office.

Grayson Perry on the visual environment people build around themselves- ''When i got older, I wanted to decode their choices. Why did my Nan's front room, with its brass ornaments and pot plants, look like it did? Why do middle-class people love organic food and recycling? Why does the owner of a castle and 6,000 acres wear a threadbare tweed jacket? People seem to be curating their possessions to communicate consciously, or more often unconsciously, where they want to fit into society. The British care about taste because it is inextricably woven into where they want to fit into our system of social class.''

David Shrigley
Uncomplicated art is how David Shrigley works. He does not want his work to be layered with the concept which is high brow and traditionally closely related to Art. Ironically he was nominated for the prestigious art award The Turner Prize.









Megan Chilcott

Contextual Studies

Contextual Studies

Benjamin Zephaniah- Rong Radio
In this film the poem 'Rong Radio' is performed by Benjamin Zephaniah. Although it is 6mins and 45 seconds it is very good. The poem references the idea of being out of kilter with the 'norm', how this affects you and how you are seen by other people, how you are measured by others against their values and beliefs, what it is like being on the outside. The poem raises many questions for the 'Other' project.

Hussein Chalayan - 'Airmail Dresses' 1999
Hussein Chalayan's importance has now been recognized to be at the forefront of contemporary fashion design. After all he has been named ''British Designer of the Year'' and has created an elegant reputation for his use of innovative materials, meticulous pattern cutting and incorporating new technology, as well as eccentric pieces which border on ins-tallation art. He has a sense of material in an inventive and humorous way, with some references to the orient, (his heritage is eastern Mediterranean, Turkish states that his creative work ''borrows from architecture, design, philosophy, anthropology, science and technology'' who straddles disciplines.
He sewed a papery materials into foldable ''airmail clothes'' complete with red and blue striped borders and string which could be used to tie them up into letter format. Chalayan has recently produced a T-shirt which is delivered in a sealed envelope printed with an airmail postmark, an address and sender section and a short text which explains to the buyer that sending somebody this item of clothing serves ''as a reminder of your presence or absence.''

Yinka Shonibare
He was nominated for the Turner Prize and is famous for his use of fabric in his work. The patterns are originally Dutch and were subsumed into African culture during the Colonial period where countries like Holland, France and Britain took over large regions of Africa, India, Pakistan, Austailia, New Zealand, Canada, etc.


Yinka Shonibare's Jardin d'amour (2007) was the series of installations. The artwork consisted of a labyrinthine, reconstructed 18th century Rococo-styled ornamental French garden arranged as three secluded enclosures in which different thematic tableaux were staged. Each of the main areas were separated by shrub-covered trellis, tightly bound reed-screen fences, privets, climbing plants and artificial rose bushed that served as foliage-covered boundary walls around the entire exhibition.
Yinka Shonibare's art is widely regarded as powerful enough to disturb even the most traditional and resistant organisations.

Linton Kwesi Johnson- 'Bass Culture'
This performances is 6 minutes and 5 seconds. It is a poem that references the idea of an island culture. It could be based within a particular geography of the Caribbean but it could also be relevant to all isolated places where a regional identity is explored.






Megan Chilcott

Greenwashing Task

Greenwashing

Greenwashing is the practice of making an unsubstantiated or misleading claim about the environmental benefits of a product, service, technology or company practice. Greenwashing can make a company appear to be more environmentally friendly than it really is.




Fur Council of Canada- 
Uses subdued pure colours and contrasting that with a bold and vivid green title of 'eco-fashion' this gives the impression that what they're advertising is pure and natural which is wrong as skinning/killing animals is done in a very inhumane way.






iPad-
Apple's ad campaigns make it clear that products such as the iPad are useful for ''smart'' eco-friendly users, the use of their logo gives a feel of a love of nature, yet their inability of correctly advertising their product with having a built in battery was them greenwashing the iPad. 3.27 million were sold before they were even distributed to shops meaning 3,27 million iPads were sold to people who were mislead by Apple's greenwashing.




BP-
In BP's advertising it uses warm, natural colours to show nature, sunshine and sea yet what they actually do is anything but natural and due to negligence it lead to the worse oil spill in American history and killed hundreds of animals.




In my opinion using animals to find a cure for lung cancer has its obvious benefits but I believe that it needs to be in the most humane way possible in order for the animals to be respected in the way that they deserve.



Megan Chilcott

Friday, 11 March 2016

Contextual Studies 9.3.16

Contextual Studies- 9.3.16- Greenwashing.

Greenwashing: Making unsubstantiated or misleading claims.

Coca Cola- claims their plastic bottles are made out of 30% of plant material but they're unable to show evidence of what that plant is. Making their bottles misleading.

iPad- The battery cannot be detached meaning that they cannot be recycled/ be put into landfill.

BP- their logo is a sun coming up over a landscape showing love for nature and the environment but they're are responsible for the largest oil spill in American history. 4.9 million barrels of crude oil spilt into the Gulf of Mexico, harming killing lots of wildlife.

Fur Council of Canada- Said that making fake fur is bad for the environment and it's far more economical that wearing real fur and skinning/killing the animals.

Anti Campaigns

French and Saunders Fur- They used the platform of comedy to make people aware of why people want to wear fake coats and what sort of people wear them.
 
Lynx Anti Fur Coat Campaign- Brings awareness that the coats were once living animals and it takes up to 40 animals to make a coat but only one to wear it.

Smoking Ad Campaigns- Manipulated facts April 1953. As more facts came to light about the horrors of smoking more ads about to bad side of smoking started to appear.

Anti Smoking Campaign- A picture of a person dying of lung cancer is used to show the disgusting affects of smoking.

Cancer Research - Smoking- Cancer research forces smoke into dogs to see the affects of cigarettes and how disease grows on a living creature. 

Megan Chilcott