Wednesday, 13 December 2017

Discombobulate Me!



(Final shots where the relationship between the doll and the human, throughout everyday activities, confuses the viewer as the doll is doing human-like activities.)

Discombobulate Me took some time figuring out the perspective foreshortening in order for image to look as though the doll is holding a human.



Perspective foreshortening allows the doll to look larger and so the human looks more vulnerable in the image.




One of the issues was trying to give the illusion that the doll's hand was holding the fork. I had to hold the fork, but the photographer placed the hand in front, to hide my hand. The trick was giving the impression that the doll's hand was of a similar size to mine, that is achieved through distance. Furthermore it is was a task to disguise the doll's hand so that it looked like a human hand. To get away with this we thought of blurring that area where the doll's hand is to create an ambiguity.

Invention?


Thursday, 7 December 2017

Visual thinking - Sherbet Straws


One hundred sherbet straws video: https://vimeo.com/265840319






Focusing on how the sherbet reacts with the taste buds/saliva by licking on perspex, watching the marks being made by the mouth whilst tasting the sherbet.  


Mark-making with the long edge of the straws, by dipping in ink and printing on paper.
Then mixing ink with washing-up liquid and using the straw to create bubbles. The effervescence is what is depicted from the fizz of the sherbet and the relationship between the sherbet and the taste bud.

Visual imagery portraying the path that the sherbet makes when poured on a surface. Resembling a trail or a road mark.

Also looking at the way sherbet looks similar to other dangerous powdered drug substances like cocaine. My group agreed that there is a connection between addictions, whether it is a sugar addiction or a drug addiction. In fact the intensely playful colours and flavours from the sherbet correlates to the hallucinogenic effects of drugs.

Experimenting with the way the sherbet (sugar) makes a mark. We did this by pouring sherbet in a container and melting it in the microwave, after 3 minutes the container had melted through (of course it was made of plastic) and the microwave had been tarnished with this caramelized hardened sherbet.

It took so long to clean off. Poor cleaners.


There were no cleaning detergents so the only way we could remove the sugar from the table was by scraping vigorously with a fork.


Taping them together in rows, with about 34 in each row.

Snipping both ends off and collecting the sherbet in a bucket.


The repetitive cross-section of the straws can be seen as a motif, a pattern, a mark made by the formation of the straws.

Using the sherbet straws to build a structure, so that multiple sherbet straws are used.




The 3D piece was then placed on a yellow backdrop, as we thought this colour complimented and accentuated the exuberant colours of the sherbet straws, displaying the nature and fun energy of the sugary sherbet. Making you feel youthful and buzzed. 
Each of the thousands of the straws are used as a vehicle to shoot the sherbet out once the movement of air/sound has been applied.