Predisposition
Monday, 24 March 2014
Predisposition to Obligatory Creation
Formline designing was a crucial part of
my artistic path since it began, for this reason I figured it would be suitable
to make formline art from waste I had collected to create art from. To
collaborate First Nations art, or art in general, with Garbage and wasteful
items is, I find, a counteraction to the problems these non-degradable products
have with the earth. Therefore, if me doing this project will create insult to
anyone in the Aboriginal community I apologize, but I see it as an affine
concept to juxtapose NWC art with garbage. I feel having blood ties to the
Tlingit nation and being an artist of that culture as well, positions me to
submit time to create the intrinsic art of formline with the waste materials
left behind from primarily my own personal consumerism.
Making art from items generally
unconsidered to be aesthetically pleasing has been an interesting effort. I
have created a formline Orca whale from mainly plastic bags, Styrofoam,
aluminum tape, and masking tape, but also included is cardboard from various
food packages and other consumed items. My inspiration came from artists from
the mid 20th century such as Robert Rauschenberg and Arman, who
would use various items and other commonplace objects to add into their
paintings and sculptures.
In the beginning the absolute clarity for
what I was to create from the garbage I had collected was not there. I was
confused and wasn’t sure what type of art I would create, a sculpture, a
painting, furniture of some sort, I didn’t know. Until I came across a drawing
of an orca my teacher Wayne Price drew in one of my sketchbooks: and there was
my project. I would create a formline orca from the, would be, waste I
collected. This orca I would assume at first to be just like the drawing but it
morphed into its own presentation as I went along.
The first part of my Keet – orca in the
Tlingit language – would be out of plastic bags. I rolled, twisted, then taped
tightly the bags and functioned them as the form to create the back of the
Keet. From there I again twisted some more of the bags and some cardboard – for
the sharp curve of the stomach area close to where the head would be situated.
The plastic bags I came to realize then would be the most malleable material I
could use for the rounded effect I wished to seek for the design. As envisioned
they would become just that and the main productive element to my creation.
Plastic bags can hold place in the use of
moving objects or stuffing cups and glasses or storing paper, to say just some
of they’re useful potentials. They can be used repetitiously, but this depends
on how long before they tear and for instance the duration to which the person
owning them wants to keep the bags. But the main use for them I reside with is to
carry the consumable items from their place of purchase to home, to then be put
under the sink until the bathroom garbage or cat litter needs to be bagged and
tossed out into the alleyway dumpster. And eventually the bags would then
accumulate to the point of overwhelming the space underneath the sink. I always
wondered what I would end up doing with all the plastic bags I collected and
this project was a suitable solution for the predicament.
As I continued on with shaping the
project it was then made evident I needed a more solid base for a lot of the
forms I was to create such as the ovoids and U-shapes; and everything else
besides the primary form of the body for that matter. I had just purchased an
apartment size deep freeze and had the protectively coherent Styrofoam from the
inside of the box. This I presumed would be the perfect material to use as the
solid base for the forms explained earlier. Styrofoam did equate to my expectations
as the material to use for the base of the forms. It was indeed a beneficial addition
to the structuration of the design I was assembling into physicality.
Tape was beneficial just the same as the
plastic bags and Styrofoam; although I did not know the extent to which it
would be of importance for the project. Not only did I use it to tighten and
solidify the plastic bags it became the outer skin, for lack of a better word,
for the Killer whale. The taping was an interesting feat to accomplish. As I
continued wrapping the forms, after constructing them in the manner I wished to
achieve, I came to the end of a few rolls of tape. When the end of the tape
roll was met I would then continue to the next until I did not have anymore. I
went to Canadian Tire looking for a specific electrical tape I had run out of
while trying to match all the secondary formline components of the Keet. And as
I became disappointed in not being able to find the electrical tape I was
looking for. Then I seen some aluminum tape and figured it may be a good
choice to use. It was a satisfactory decision to choose the aluminum tape
because when I wrapped some of the forms with it, the tape wrinkled when
pressed and looked as if it was just tinfoil I used to wrap the shapes, feeding
the effect of a reused waste material.
I was fixated on the idea of painting
this project when it was finished. I thought to create a shell with cut and
refigured Tim Horton’s cups around the orca to make it aesthetically manageable
to paint. As I continued to tape and construct the forms together I decided
that instead of painting it, using just the white masking tape as the skin of
the project looks good and that it could equate to the orca being an albino or
a spirit.
The final addition to my project was the
black plastic sheets I discovered in the studio I share with my cousin. I was
trying to figure what I should use to strengthen and hold the pieces of the
project together. The plastic sheets proved to be the answer to my problem and
they were easily reformed to the shapes of the projects body. My project of
trash-art was now in completion.
From
here I would like to speak on the polemical viewpoint of my project. “The
demands of capitalist production… do not exhaust the contradictions of consumer
culture” (Goodman 35). When bringing
that previous statement into alignment with the ramifications – such as garbage
from consumed products – the end result inevitably works out as the products
ending up as garbage dump accumulations. Humankind
has begun the practices for recycling, reducing, and reusing, yet the disposing
of many of these items to landfills that fit these categories still exists,
case in point from the inexhaustible consumerism. I can’t say I don’t and will
not throw garbage like this away ever again in my life but I am now open and
aware to the possible artistic endeavors with trash. The materials are there in
our everyday lives to use for this practice of trash art, only the drive to do
so is the spark needed for its progression.
Part of my motivation of alignment with
the trash and NWC art is form the section from the book Art in the Life of the Northwest Coast Indian, “The art was thus
intimately bound up with the social structure, a fact which accounts for its
great strength but also for its rapid decline in the 20th century;
for when the art became disorganized through the impact of acculturation to
white customs, the art lost all its motivation… Thus Northwest Coast Indian art
must be regarded as a thing of the past…” (Gunther
2). This section of the book has played a role in strengthening my interest
for Northwest Coast art. It was published in 1966 when the potlatch ban and
residential schools were still in full swing. The assumptions placed by the
author that NWC art should be regarded as a thing of the past, I can only laugh
and say no it is not; I have now made NWC art from items once predestined to be
waste.
Ideas such as, the Maker Movement, where
it “… encourages, collaboration, invention, and radical participation with a
single goal: to create new things,” is where trash-art should be included
within the same context (Samtani 1). The idea may sound unattractive, making art
from garbage, but not all garbage is hindered by say, rot, and can still be an
active ingredient to the creation of a spectacular work of art. Don’t get me
wrong, the practice of trash-art is active amongst many other artists, but
let’s say for instance, like the maker movement, trash-art is proposed to
elementary schools. Who better than the up and coming leaders of this world
should the idea of trash-art be proposed to? They are the future and not all
but some will journey the artistic path and become prospects in the arrival of
a new age of creation, and should be introduced to include trash into an
artistic endeavor.
Our current existence has become
intertwined with prodigious technological advancements yet we deceive ourselves
with the out of sight, out of mind axiom when throwing away our garbage.
;
is there technology aimed specifically for waste management? If not then why
don’t we make more art from this everlasting waste?
With
this project I have learned more capabilities of art production and I hope to
always stay keen with the idea of trash-art. With such vast productions of
materials such as food wrappers and containers, the value of these items can go
from zero to ten with the collaboration of them romanticized into prospective
art. We as humans have opened a door to a storm of harmful pollutants with our
industrial productions, and we still haven’t figured how to shut that door.
With the making of art from garbage maybe that door can be nudged a bit more
shut than it has been with the recycling, reduce, reuse implementation.
Saturday, 8 March 2014
"Keet"
My first iteration for my art from trash project will be an Orca, Keet in Tlingit language, in Northern Northwest Coast formline design. The project was inspired by a drawing I found in one of my sketchbooks of an Orca designed by my teacher Wayne Price. From this, I began to twist and roll and squish together plastic bags, paper, some Styrofoam pieces, envelopes; chocolate bar wrappers, and whatever else I had that could fill voids. I am still collecting garbage from here and there and it feels good to know I'm making an artwork from what I've collected. Some, may be things that are considered recyclable, to be put back into market, and others predestined for landfills. But in this event, the items to be chosen by me will all be recycled into art.
As for a methodology, I will be using knead-able and hard items to collectively construct this Orca I have begun making. Masking tape has been the binder so far keeping the materials together in proper position. I tried a hot glue gun but that does not work well with Styrofoam or plastic, nor does crazy glue work for Styrofoam. So the bonding has been the primary job for the masking tape. When I have mapped out and constructed the form I'm aiming for I was thinking of using Tim Horton's cups to shell the Keet which will make it easier to paint afterwards. And regarding paint I think I will be using Acrylic paint or maybe some type of paint I find second hand and feel it to be suitable.
The first iteration will hopefully establish an appreciation for this new way of creating art for me. And I feel it will also lessen my guilty conscience for disposing to the steel bins.
As for a methodology, I will be using knead-able and hard items to collectively construct this Orca I have begun making. Masking tape has been the binder so far keeping the materials together in proper position. I tried a hot glue gun but that does not work well with Styrofoam or plastic, nor does crazy glue work for Styrofoam. So the bonding has been the primary job for the masking tape. When I have mapped out and constructed the form I'm aiming for I was thinking of using Tim Horton's cups to shell the Keet which will make it easier to paint afterwards. And regarding paint I think I will be using Acrylic paint or maybe some type of paint I find second hand and feel it to be suitable.
The first iteration will hopefully establish an appreciation for this new way of creating art for me. And I feel it will also lessen my guilty conscience for disposing to the steel bins.
Thursday, 20 February 2014
A predisposition
I have been compiling garbage for a little while to create art from, it hit me as inspiration to do from art history class. Artists using garbage to create art during and around the mid 20th century. We see garbage absolutely everyday and there's no soon to see end by the way everything is in the societies we populate. Things we more often than not throw in the trash can and label as out of sight out of mind are what I would like to rejuvenate into different subjects or a subject. This idea I feel is aligned with the description of the assignment and so I shall keep collecting garbage for the projects absolute conception. Not ever using garbage to create art from, and adjacent with the billions of others, being a dedicated contributor to the landfills for the past 31 years subliminally or not, art from garbage is my aim with this project.
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