August 20, 2011

Prage Quadrennial Part 6 – Bridging the Gap

By Caitlin McLeod at 3:58 pm

Along my journey I have seen many different forms of theatre, as well as many different forms of visual art. Yet the differences between the two begin to fade when you encounter performance art, and avant guarde theatre, let alone spontaneous public work. So is there really any difference? When you get down to the roots of it, not really.

 

 

Art is creative expression. Theatre is a performed narrative. These are the nut-shell definitions.  But these definitions intertwine, and create a grey area. The line between visual art and theatre is painfully thin. In many ways theatre is a form of art. It is creative expression. On the flip side, art also maintains theatricality in production and presentation.

 

Society is comfortable with classifying things in order to better understand them. Often times visual art is classified as that which is in a gallery, or museum, and theatre is classified as that which is on a stage. However it is not that simple.

Looking back  at the Prague exhibition floor, I remember all the national exhibits, and how they were displaying “theatre”. In reality what they were displaying were photographs, model sculptures, textiles, and various other artifacts. All of these pictures and items were taken out of the context of their story to be presented at the national exhibits, and in this way they became visual art.

Theatre as a whole is a narrative in motion, yet the pieces and parts that make up this narrative are works of art.

This concept is reinforced by the fact that scenic models and costume renderings were on display at the Prague National Modern Art Museum, as works of art.

The concept of the stage also has many pit falls. What is a stage? Is it a frame through which we see a picture? A platform? A venue with an audience? In this regard museums are stages for visual art.

You can take a work of art, and develop it into a narrative, a montage, or a dialogue – in this sense it develops a theatricality about it, which can be classified as theatre.

The narrative does not have to be in motion, it can be in how the audience reacts to it. This is best exemplified in John Cage’s 4’33″, where a musician enters the stage and performs the piece for precisely 4minutes and 33 seconds. While no actual notes are played it is the sounds of the audience that creates the piece. Similarly the reactions to visual art maintain this same sense of theatricality. The narrative and movement are not as obvious as they are in theatre, however a dialogue exists either way.

 

There is no form of art that breaks the lines of classification as abruptly as public art. True, art is in the name yet it is neither on a stage nor in a frame. The term public art classifies all works of art found outside an established museum, gallery, or theatre. You find it on the streets, in schools, hospitals, parks, abandoned buildings, etc.

Often times public art is commissioned by the government, however today we see a lot of public art that is installed spontaneously by the artist or artists involved. Some may call this graffiti, street theatre, performance art, renegade artists, protests, even advertisements are a form of public art.

Public art responds to a public, either to inform, disturb, critique, or simply to get one to THINK.

No matter how you look at it public art is produced by the public, for the public. It is a direct relation to the population that lives there, usually incorporating site specificity to enhance how rooted this work is to the locale and people that live there.

What I mentioned earlier about John Cage’s 4’33″, is essential to understanding how public art thrives or dies in a society. The way public art responds to an environment impacts the people living there – and the response of that public to the artwork is as important as the artwork itself.

My public theatre piece that was part of Six Acts blends all lines of classification. It was a spectacle, a moving artwork responding to the Fransican Garden. Similarly the public art I saw in both Berlin and Konstanz served to enrich the lives of the people that live there, while giving them a hint of the history the city was founded upon.

Public art, good or bad, shapes a society. It defines locations, such as the Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty,  and in smaller venues such as the Astronomical  Clock of Prague, churches have been using public art for years to maintain an identity with saints and angels, the Berlin Wall, and in Konstanz we have our fountains.

Visual art and theatre also come from society, they are created and performed for a society. To enrich lives and open eyes.

 

While society tries to differentiate visual art and theatre by their context, public art finds its context in society thus creating the synthesis of all art forms – creative communication – straight to the public, whether they want to be impacted by it or not.

August 16, 2011

Prague Quadrennial Part 5 – Visual Art in Central Europe

By Caitlin McLeod at 3:20 pm

Aside from the conference I also visited various museums, galleries, and locations of public art, not only in Prague, but also in Berlin and Konstanz, Germany.

In comparing the visual and public art on display in these select cities of Europe, to those in the United States, there is one large difference I found incredibly exciting. The acknowledgement of process in architectural and theatrical designs.

At the Prague National Museum of Modern Art I discovered that there were plaster models of architecture on display – along with the sketches of the buildings. I found the recognition of architecture as modern art incredibly interesting. The museums I have visited in the States may recognize architecture as an art form, but not to this caliber. The Museum in Prague not only recognized architecture as an art, but the models and sketches that lead to the final product as an art.

On top of architecture there were also costume renderings and numerous model boxes depicting scenic designs. This display of theatrical designs as artwork enthralled me. I found that the term “modern art” encompassed much more than paintings and sculpture in Prague.

I also went into the Alphonse Mucha Museum in Prague as well as the Museum of Decorative Arts. Mucha is one of my all time favorite artists. His line work and depiction of the human form has inspired me for many of my own pieces of art work.  The Museum of Decorative Arts did not allow photography, however the large array of clothing, clocks, glasswork, books, and furniture on display made me understand the concept of art as an all encompassing term for fine art.

While I was in Berlin, I unfortunately unable to go in the Guggenheim, as it was in a period of change-over in exhibits. However I was able to view a lot of different forms of public art, from graffiti, public murals, and sculptures. The graffiti served to enliven the area, and bringing a form of culture and visual interest to the area. Had the neighborhoods I walked been void of graffiti they would have been baren, another strip of tad buildings with small stores trying to survive under them. Many store fronts even had spray painted murals to attract passerby into their businesses.  The public art served as a reflection of the people that lived in the city, an outlet for creative expression.

In Konstanz I found the same thing, that public art served as an extension of culture for the people that lived in Konstanz. Many sculptures illustrating the colorful and quirky life of a shore line city. The galleries in Konstanz reflected the similar quirky life of a small town.

 

The visual art present in Central Europe not only extends to the elements of theatrical and architectural design,  but also reflects the people that live in those areas.

 

August 11, 2011

Cobalt Studios – 8.10 and 8.11

By Caitlin McLeod at 11:33 pm

Began our transparency projects!

We are making small drops that alter their appearance when lit from behind. Tis is accomplished through the selective use of opaque paints and dharma dye. By making certain areas less opaque than others you enable the light from behind to go through the fabric easier, you can then apply the dharma dye to the back side of the drop to create a new image that appears in that place.

This can be used for sunsets, windows lighting up when it’s darker, most often a change in time of day, or color.

The biggest advice I can give you is to starch and size the he’ll out of your fabric. On the back side use 3 layers of starch and 2 on the front (since the front is generally where you apply the opaque paint – whatever side you’re applying the dye on you want more sealant)

My project is one with the pyramids in which it changes from day to sunset. I’ve been using prevail sprayers to achieve semi translucent skies on the front, and then even coats of color on the back. Another important note is that in areas with transparency you will be able to see your brushstrokes, or any strokes made with your tool. This is why I used sprayers, however your choice of tool can also aide in your image, just make it purposeful.

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August 9, 2011

Cobalt Studios – 8.6 and 8.7

By Caitlin McLeod at 6:20 pm

For the past few days we have been working on our “you want me to paint WHAT?! on THAT?!”
Basically each student got an unusual fabric to work with and had to paint a given image on that fabric.

My project wS on a shower curtain, and I painted a translucent stained-glass window of an ogre.

Useful tips, when painting on a surface that the binder in the paint does not want to stick to, put a coat of crysal-gel, from rosco. Originally my paint would just chip off but after a few experiments I was able to find this solution. I also worked with Dharma dye,which is water soluble and translucent!

Some other tips that came from this project include:
Mask everything you don’t want sprayed, even if it’s 5 ft away, over spray will find a way.
When working with satin methicyl works as a great binder to maintain the shiny quality of the satin and allow paint to stick to the surface.
When cartooning on an unknown surface use string lines, so you don’t have to worry about the cartoon lines being unable to erase.
When working on scrim use a scrim pick to ensure that the scrim does not stick to the surface – things DO stick to bogus paper.

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August 7, 2011

Cobalt Studios – 8.5

By Caitlin McLeod at 3:00 pm

Today we finished up our marble! And also worked on drapery and stenciling.

For stencils there are a few ways to get the image to come through the stencilbwi minimal bleeding.

The most traditional way is to use a natural sponge, or sponge roller, and apply the paint to the sponge using a brush, to avoid over loading it. Then while applying the sponge to the stencil you do an even build up across the entire stencil, rather than focusing on one area at a time.

My personal favorite is the “wax on – wax odd” method. For this one you fill a large fitch with a small amount of paint, dab out the end before applying the fitch to the stencil, to get rid of any blobs that may be on the end of the bristles. Then you place your fitch on the stencil and move it in a tight clockwise motion, or wax on, then alternate with a counterclockwise motion, wax off. So you move across e stencil surface with alternating clockwise and counterclockwise motions, filling in the stencil evenly.

One last method Rachel showed us was to use a wood grain brush, the kind the resembles a wide tooth comb- where half e bristles have been cut out, and apply paint in one direct, giving a streaky texture. Us ia greT for stencils on wood grain etc.
With this method paint tends to gather on ne edge of the stencil, the edge you are moving all the brush strokes towards, this can either be annoying or wonderful, as the small build up tends to resemble stitching marks. If you don’t like this effect then you simply need to clean the stencil every so often to remove any build up on the underside of the stencil.

Helpful hint is. To always have a clean bucket of water and a clean sponge handy to clean the stencil. Build up will happen and it is always necessary to clean it if you want to keep a uniform stencil pattern.

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August 5, 2011

Cobalt Studios – 8.3 and 4

By Caitlin McLeod at 1:21 am

Marble

The only sure thing about marble is that the is no one way to do it. Every reference of marble has new characteristics that you would approach differently with a new set of tools.

However there are a couple hints I can give you:
For your base coat scumble together 2 to 3 colors
Always take note of patterning and directionality of your sample
Consider using non-traditional tools such as burlap, sponges, feather dusters, sprayers.
Let layers dry, you don’t want to get soupy.
If you have marble with large chunks in it mask off with pieces of bogus paper
You can always go in with a glaze after it’s dry to add contrast.

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August 2, 2011

Cobalt Studios – 8.2

By Caitlin McLeod at 8:41 pm

Woodgrain, all day.

We started woodgrain exercises for both finished and aged wood. Right now they don’t lo like too much but tomorrow we will be adding in all the highlights and shading so I’m ready to make things pop!

Here’s some helpful hits I surmised today:
for your base coat, wet blend at least two colors, and make sure all your brush strokes are going in the same direction as your grain.

The next step is to have a sample of the type of wood grain you are trying to emulate. The pease of e day was “thin grain, thin space, wide grain wide space”. The rule of thumb is that when the grain is thinner the grain is very tight and close together, while when the grain widens the spaces between the grain widen as well. It also helps to use your brush as you would a calligraphy tool when doing the knots and wider grains. We were using a husky brush, much like a fitch except the bristles were aligned to create thin lines. When focusing on a section of all thin lined grain you can use a regular lay-in brush whose bristles separate easily.

After you apply the grain you begin adding details, such as glazes imitating the stain of finish wood, or highlights and speckles for aged wood.

All I can say is practice makes perfect. Every scenic artist needs to know how to woodgrain, you’d be hard pressed to find a theatre season that doesn’t use it.

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Cobalt Studios – 8.1

By Caitlin McLeod at 12:40 am

Hello world, back again for another week at Cobalt!
Today we had our lesson in perspective. Specifically in how you use perspective drawing to transfer a drawing from small scale to a larger scale drawing that you would use as a cartoon for a drop.
You essentially plot out the vanishing points on the paper and use a string tied to a pushpins in the ground to plot out the perspective lines from each object.
Make sure your smaller reference is in scale! Or else you’ll have an even bigger headache.
By using the scale rule and the vanishing point or points you are able to chart out the large draw, no grid involved.

Filed under: (td)squared Blog