Showing posts with label Diorama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diorama. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Drawings taking form

Hannah and I are taking a week off for research (i.e. finding appropriate photographs for models, investigating paintings of the American West landscape, buying paint and gesso in Columbus, and reading Modelling Terrain, etc.). In the meantime, here are our drawings of how all these earthworks are going to fit into what now feels like a cramped space.



Night will fall into sunset from east to west and storm clouds will approach Amarillo Ramp and Lightning Field in the east. Spiral Jetty will extend into the backdrop with some of Salt Lake painted into the horizon. In addition, Sun Tunnels will be aligned with the sunset.



How does it compare?? Still too early to tell...


William Wegman, Parko, 2006

Friday, November 13, 2009

Statistics



Hannah and I are prepping drawings for the diorama today. We opted to remove the plywood due to the fragility factor and replaced it with easily bendable masonite. Here we are with the first coat of gesso.



I've gathered some statistics which we may or may not adhere to in our "fantasy landscape." I foresee the most difficult scenario would be making Lightning Field taller than Roden Crater in a 4' space. Fantasy indeed.

Roden Crater:

Scale = 1.8 miles across
Elevation = 5347’ or 5356’
Latitude & Longitude = 35.425º N, 111.259º W

Lightning Field:

Scale = 1 mile x 1 kilometer, 400 poles, 220’ apart
Elevation = 7200’
Latitude & Longitude = 37.25818º N, 122.0536º W

Double Negative:

Scale = 1500’ long, 50’ deep, and 30’ wide (initially)
Elevation = 1312’ (hmmm... really?)
Latitude & Longitude = 36.3655º N, 114.2040º W

Spiral Jetty:

Scale = 1500’
Elevation = 4195’ (fluctuates)
Latitude & Longitude = 41.2615º N, 112.4049º W

Sun Tunnels:

Scale = No exact dimensions found but Holt bought 40 acres, ¼ mile square
Each tube is 18’ long and 9’ wide
Elevation = 4472’ (Lucin, Utah)
Latitude & Longitude = 41.1121º N, 113.2740º W

Amarillo Ramp:

Scale = 140’ diameter, 15’ tall (and shrinking)
Elevation = 3668’ (Cadillac Ranch since I couldn't find anything closer)
Latitude & Longitude = 35.1732º N, 102.737º W

Friday, November 6, 2009

Models (or Bending Plywood is Not Fun)



We routed an eight foot piece of plywood, wet it down, and were completely scared of breaking it as we fit it inside the diorama today. Unfortunately, the wood we bought was too fragile to bend the opposite way so we have a lot of filling and sanding to do before we get a smooth surface.



It looked so empty inside without anything so Chet finally took the portrait of us sitting in it. We are guessing this thing will weigh a couple hundred pounds (sans us) once we are finished.



Here we are covered in wood dust. One day here soon we will be at the point where we are working on the interior. Until then there is joint compounding and sanding to do. I have to find elevations, longitudes, and latitudes for these locations as well. I will admit to being a complete dork by just putting a book called Terrain Modelling on interlibrary loan. It's amazing how many volumes there are on building military dioramas. None on scale models of earth art!

Of course this is very reminiscent of the Menil Collection's scale model which is up there with one of my favorite things.



... though I was never truly happy with Vik Muniz's interpretation of it in his series Model Pictures.



Published in SPOT magazine, 2002 written by yours truly:

"The Menil Collection commissioned Muniz to create a piece specifically for FotoFest 2002 based on the artwork in the collection. Muniz discovered the Menil model on a site visit and was immediately drawn to the exact rendering of every sculpture, painting, and icon in the foundation’s collection. Unlike many institutions who use the color copier to reproduce art work, the pieces in the Menil model were hand crafted by Mark Flood, Doug Laguarta, and David Warren. Each room is represented in miniature proportion; it is a fascinating object borne of meticulous execution, used to visualize exhibitions before installation. It is no wonder that Muniz was drawn to its scale and detailed craft.

After photographing a number of the maquettes, Muniz decided to narrow the field and use only Surrealist art works. Since the Menil is famous for its Surrealism collection, this was a logical decision. In an interview with Matthew Drutt, Muniz also revealed that he selected well known Surrealist images because it is easier to deceive the viewers who enter the exhibition with preconceived ideas about the original work of art. The majority of the objects in Model Pictures are reproductions of the work of René Magritte and Man Ray, with token representations from Max Ernst, Pablo Picasso, Gustave Doré, Alberto Giacometti, Odilon Redon, and Giorgio de Chirico. The resulting exhibition includes twenty maquettes photographically enlarged to the scale of the original paintings. A section of the original model resides in the center of the installation.

The rephotographed reproductions are hardly accurate renditions of the original artwork. Detail is lost in the process creating a quality similar to a xerox of a xerox of a xerox. The inherent imperfections are magnified, emphasizing the dings, smudges, and unblended shifts in color. Magritte’s Le chant des sirènes, looks as if it was rendered in crayon; a rubbing over pavement to create the texture of the background sky. There is a subtle clash in surfaces – the smooth, nonreflective photographic paper contrasts with the textured quality, which is heightened in the reproductive process. The photographs also incorporate the original and sometimes overly elaborate frames, creating a false illusion of depth on a two-dimensional plane....

....Absurdity and humor are essential components in Muniz’s work, as witnessed by his painted silhouettes of bovines on white cows and two portraits of the Mona Lisa, one in peanut butter and the other in jelly. These two elements, along with the artist’s laborious process, are absent in the far more serious Model Pictures. He relies on found objects, merely documenting someone else’s reproduction of art rather than creating the work himself. He depends on a fascinating, existing object to carry the installation, but ultimately, it is not taken far enough..."

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Joseph Beuys would be proud



It rolls around and moves! We moved it out to the sunshine from the foundry to see if it would work, fit through the door, and take photographs with a new background.



Tuesday, November 3, 2009

The Diorama is moving along.....

Hannah and I received the "girl discount" at Alro Steel despite the fact that a "girl" waited on us. 60% off - we will take what we can get! Chet cut two 24 foot poles to perfection and welded them together (muchas gracias, Chet). It's been a week of sanding, puttying, and welding. By Friday we should have the plywood bent inside for the backdrop that David Hannon has willingly volunteered to paint (get a website David so I can provide everyone with a link). Everyone is getting as excited as we are to see this take shape.

The images....

The base after Joseph Beuys. This will remain raw steel after we polish off the black grime that I wear on my face to photography class after spending a couple hours in the foundry. The main difference is that our diorama will have casters with brakes.



Hannah holding the post-it with the dimensions for the caster plate.



Chet's "love" welding glove (yes the other one says "hate") while cutting the steel.



The welding "uniform" (out of necessity). We discovered that the soap stone pen writes excellent graffiti (i.e. swear words) all over the steel.



Taking a photo of Chet welding without looking at the light.



We had to cut down the size of the diorama (no more 4'x4'x4') because we realized it wouldn't fit through any door other than the woodshop. So the new size should hopefully squeeze through Hannah's office door where we plan on moving this monstrous work of art to start carving out the terrain.

In addition to miniature versions of the earthworks, the diorama will also include:

1) a naked man swimming off the top of Spiral Jetty.
2) Jimbo on the lip of Roden Crater, pink balloons, & a few salt licks here and there
3) green rocks and a bell at Amarillo Ramp
4) an antelope running through Lightning Field
5) a cowboy hat blown off someone's head into Double Negative or blue tulle
6) doormats at Sun Tunnels

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Earthworks Diorama Take 2


[Hannah contemplating mathematics & scale]

The diorama is huge! Hannah and I had plans on working on it throughout the next few months on her sun porch. WRONG! It won't even fit in the front door = should have seen that one coming. Chet has an idea to rig a pulley system in the woodshop that will elevate it out of the way when we aren't working on it. So here are the sides that will be firmly attached when we are all back to work on it in the woodshop/sculpture area at the end of August. I predict a group photograph with all of us inside.


[Hannah inside the diorama & Chet's hands holding it together]

Friday, June 12, 2009

Nesting Boxes in their full wood burned glory...

Last's weeks wood shop activities involve researching the Field Museum's dioramas...



The American Museum of Natural History's website:



Making Peanut Butter & Spiral Honey sandwiches



Hannah and Chet working hard:



and here they are...

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Diorama is in Full Swing: Meet the Players - Chet, Mary, Hannah, and Jacinda


The first meeting went really well (I have to remember to bring a camera to document this process). We have a materials list, a calendar, and a plan!

Chet Geiselman: Sculptor, consultant, "Preparator," and man who remembered he had a camera on his computer to take a group photograph.

Mary Barczak: Recent photo graduate, mask maker, and our assistant who knows more about miniatures than any of us (all dressed up for her hot date).

Hannah Barnes: Painter, "nesting box" recipient, and killer graph drawer showing off the plan.

Yours truly: Super excited because she managed to talk some of her favorite people in Muncie to collaborate with her on this aspect of the project.

Materials to be purchased this weekend and the "nesting boxes" will be started on Monday.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

26 Days to Go: Diorama, Nesting Boxes, & Even More on "Spiral Jetty"

Hannah and I brainstormed ideas on the diorama. There is a meeting scheduled for Thursday to go over the materials and organize the calendar. Chet and Mary will be helping us create the case (modeled on Joseph Beuys's vitrines and wanting it to be eye level). The goal is to have the outside built and the topography in place before I leave on the 21st June.



I am also investigating the idea of building "nesting boxes" to encase parts of the artwork that I send back. They will have a direct relationship to the form of the diorama.

While flipping through my notebook, I came across something I hadn't seen in a very long time... a tiny photograph of Vik Muniz hovering over his piece Brooklyn, New York, from 1998.





Directions to Spiral Jetty.

I also ran across the highlights from Robert Smithson's Spiral Jetty text from 1972 that related directly to the landscape I first saw during the 2005 visit. They are below interspersed with some more versions of the artwork.



"As we traveled, the valley spread into an uncanny immensity unlike the other landscape we had seen...Old piers were left high and dry.... The mere sight of the trapped fragments of junk and waste transported one into a world of modern prehistory..."



"Two dilapidated shacks looked over a tired group of oil rigs... Pumps coated with black stickiness rusted in the corrosive air.... The site gave evidence of a succession of man-made systems mined in abandoned hopes."



"Under shallow pinkish water is a network of mud cracks supporting the jigsaw puzzle that comprises the salt flats.... Size determines an object but scale determines art.... On the slopes of Rozel Point I closed my eyes, and the sun burned crimson through the lids.... My movie would end in sunstroke...."

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Earthwork Dioramas



Bird Habitat, American Museum of Natural History, early 1900s

I am toying with the idea of making one large diorama of all the major earthworks in the American West in the manner of a William Wegman postcard painting. I don't know if this is the best example but I am thinking of the paintings where he has half a dozen postcards from disparate landscapes that all meld together seamlessly.



William Wegman, Regency Regeons, 2008

Hannah is willing to collaborate on painting the realistic backdrops. Anyway... I look forward to hearing what you think about this possibility. By the way... I am doing my first performance (EVER) Wednesday night. It's a Soap Box Lecture.

The topic of discussion? PBJs!!