Wednesday 30 September 2009

12 29 Image manipulation digital art research


This has been done digitally using multiple layers. It has incorporated photography for the background where the artist has used a simple photograph of a wall. They have then created new layers over the top of this blending images heavily to create the effect of the sky through colour changed photos of clouds and using digital images. They then put there inked images over this and digitally enhanced it to create shadows and the illusion of 3d.

The image shows typical punk style through contrast of bright colours, tattered style and earthy colours and the use of typical punk imagery such as the figure.

Tuesday 29 September 2009

material research

Brown Longhaired 1.jpg

mask making research

1. Gather aluminum foil into a flat oval shape for the base of the shaman mask (figure A).

2. Open ash-based air-dry clay, pull off a small portion and knead to flatten.

Figure B

3. Begin constructing the shaman face over the foil shape using the clay. Cover the foil with a layer of clay (figure B). Roll a large snake to shape the nose. Smooth with fingers and use a dowel rod or pencil end to create the nostrils. Sculpt the nose.

Figure C

4. Make two pork chop-shaped clay pieces and place on the sides of the nose to form the cheekbones. Smooth with fingers dipped in water (figure C).

5. Roll two more medium snakes and lay beneath the nose to create the lips. Shape and smooth with damp fingers.

Figure D

6. Once the base shape is created, locate the eye sockets and depress slightly.

7. Snip the back end off of plastic stuffed animal eyes. Push the eyes into the sockets (figure D).

Figure F

8. Pull off two small equal portions of clay and roll into snakes. Divide the snakes in half and lay one at the top and one at the bottom of the eye. Blend in with damp fingers and smooth.

9. Once the face is constructed, pull at the edges of the mask to create a torn paper appearance. Create detailed eyebrows and lines around the eyes and mouth with a needle tool (figure F).

Figure G

10. Decide where the beads will be attached and form holes with the needle tool (figure G).

11. When complete, either air dry the mask or place the mask on a foil-covered cookie sheet and bake in oven at a low temperature (250-degrees) until thoroughly dry. Remove the foil base when the mask is dry to the touch so that the underside will dry as well.

12. Allow the shaman mask to cool after removing from the oven. Paint with an acrylic sealer.

Figure I

13. Embellish the forehead with a wire-wrapped crystal placed in the center of the forehead and wired through the punched holes. Hot glue silk ivy leaves around the back edge of the top part of the face and head. Wire feathers (figure I), beads and yarn to the sides of the face.

Figure K

14. Attach wire to the back of the shaman mask (figure K) and mount to a thrift store frame. Cover the back of the frame with handmade paper.

Thursday 24 September 2009

Tuesday 22 September 2009

Friday 18 September 2009

More Wolverine Pics

Stuff to print off at home!


Various pictures showing wolverines in different poses to help with my stance.



Wolverine escaping from a trap

Wolverine and the Rock

A Innu creation story about the wolverine, where he seems to come across as a cheeky git

The wolverine was traveling near the river, beside some rocks and a cliff, when he thought he saw something walking on the mountain. It was only a big rock but the wolverine didn’t know that. The mountain was on the other side of the river and when the wolverine was walking, the rock looked like it was moving too.

The wolverine went across the river. He looked for tracks but he didn’t see any. All he could see was the rock. So he thought that it was the rock walking on the mountain. So he talked to the rock. “I saw you walking.”

The rock said, “Not me. I’ve never walked. I’ve been sitting here for a long time.”

“No, that’s a lie,” said the wolverine. “I saw you walking. So why don’t you walk with me? Nobody ever walks with me.”

But the rock said, “How can I come with you? I never move. I’ve been sitting in the same place since the earth was here.”

“No,” said the wolverine. “I saw you walking. Now you come with me. Come with me.”

And the rock said, “Okay.”

The wolverine went on this way. He walked but the rock didn’t move. The rock stayed in the same place. The wolverine went back to the rock.

“Come with me!” said the rock and it began to roll very slowly and roll and roll.

The wolverine said, “You are walking too slow. You can go faster than that.”

“All right!” the rock said and it began to roll faster and faster.

After a while, the wolverine started to get tired. They went down the hill but the rock was still going fast. They went up the hill but the rock was going faster. The rock began to gain on the wolverine. It hit the heels of the wolverine and the wolverine said, “Don’t walk so fast. You are hurting my heels.”

The rock said, “You asked me to come with you.”

The wolverine didn’t know what to do. He asked the rock, “Slow down.”

But the said, “No. This is the way I am going.”

Suddenly the wolverine fell down and the rock went over and sat on his back.

“Get off me!” the wolverine said.

“I won’t get off you,” said the rock, “because you wanted me to come with you.”

“If you won’t get off,” said the wolverine, “I will call my brothers, the thunderstorms.”

“Call your brothers,” the rock said. “I won’t get off.”

The wolverine called out, “Brothers! Brothers! The rock is sitting on me.”

The thunderstorms heard the wolverine calling and said, “It must be our brother, the wolverine. He’s always doing something foolish and I guess that’s why the rock is sitting on him.”

The thunderstorms went over to where the wolverine was. The wolverine heard the thunderstorms coming and he said to the rock, “Don’t go no.” And the rock replied, “I won’t leave you.”

When they got close, the thunderstorms told the thunder to strike the rock but not to kill the wolverine. Just strip off his shirt. So the lightning came, stripped off the shirt and broke the rock. So the thunders made a noise. So the lightning came, striking the stone. The wolverine’s shirt was ripped.

The wolverine said, “My brothers are not helping too much.”

The wolverine looked around for his shirt. He saw it lying in pieces, like a puzzle.

He said to himself, “I will look for my brother, the frog, to help me.”

He went on his way and he saw the frog. The wolverine said, “Brother, can you sew my shirt? Look what your brothers did to it.”

“All right,” said the frog, “but you will have to put it together on the ground first.”

The wolverine put together the pieces of his shirt. The frog jumped from one piece to another to sew it.

When it was finished, the wolverine didn’t like it and he said to the frog, “You are very poor at sewing a shirt.”

The frog said, “That’s the way I sew!”

The wolverine said to the frog, “All right. I will make your hands tiny and your eyes like bubbles on balls. You will look like that.”

The wolverine took the frog and threw it into the water and that’s why the frog stays there.

“When the winter comes, when it is cold, you will go down to the earth,” said the wolverine.

The wolverine went on his way and he said, “I will look for my brother, the mouse, to sew it.”

So he saw a mouse running and he said, “My brother, sew my shirt.”

The mouse said, “Put the pieces together on the ground.”

So he put them on the ground. So the mouse sewed it. Where it was torn, he ran. He ran like a sewing needle. He went to all the places where it was torn and he finished the job.

So the wolverine liked it and put it on, and he said to the mouse, “Okay, brother. Come I will make you.”

He picked up the mouse and he began to make a long tail, sharp at the end, and a pointed snout. The wolverine took the mouse and threw it on a tree where there was some dry, rotten wood.

“Stay there, that will keep you warm,” he said, “and when the people will be born, they will call you Tshinistuiapukushish, if you live then.”

So the wolverine ran and is still running

Thursday 17 September 2009

Wolverine Wisdom





Wisdoms of the Wolverine off Animalspirits.com

Last phantom of the wilderness
Hyena of the North
Master of the Forest
Trickster hero
Magical link between the material and the spirit worlds
Revenge
Craftiness
Understands how to satisfy appetites
Ability to travel in very cold places
Understanding aggression
Protection against attackers
Multilevel protection
Standing your ground
Fierceness
Elusiveness
Gluttonry
Cleverness
Strength
Non-retreat
Effective attack
Endurance
Courage

Wolverine research


The wolverine is a small muscular carnivore resembling a bear but actually part of the weasel family. It is know for its surprising strength considering its appearance, able to take down prey much larger then itself up to the size of a moose.
They are found in many countries like Alaska, Russia and many Nordic countries such as Finland. They live in subarctic, Alpine tundra and Boreal Forests, generally cold environments.

They have thick fur for surviving the in these cold habitats, large paws for wading through deep snow, shorts legs and small eyes and ears.

It is featured greatly in Innu myth of Quebec and Labrador and in at least one its is the creator of the world. They believe "the wolverine to be an animal embodying all the cunning and mischief that can be contained in the skin of a beast. To its cunning is added great bodily strength, enabling this medium-sized animal to accomplish destruction apparently much beyond its strength."

One Innu mythological character Kuekuatsheu is a conniving sort of character who lies, cheats, is greedy, and basically acts completely inappropriately by Innu standards-- usually in the funniest possible way but isnt considered malovent towards people.