Friday, September 8, 2017

Create > Disguising

Create > Disguising


Goal:  Alter the perception of an object through camouflage or disguise.

Catalysts:  
animate, empathize, fantasize

Studio Activity:  
Wrap a three-dimensional object with cloth, thin polyurethane, or some other flexible material.  Bind the object with rope, tape, twine, or wire.

Be inspired by artist Ha Schult > https://goo.gl/FP4nVU
German conceptual artist HA Schult (b. 1939) has often worked in the realm of other people’s trash, creating large scale-works that force art into everyday life and call attention to the massive consumption of Western society. In Schult’s installation “Trash People,” he built hundreds of human-sized figures with cans, license plates, and soda bottles—a trash army built from garbage dumps that has been traveling the world for the last 19 years.
For his 2001 piece “Love Letters Building,” Schult used purposeful documentation instead of unwanted detritus to cover the facade of a former Berlin post office. Schult sent out a call for love letters—a gesture highlighting modern German romanticism, and a not-so-subtle reminder of the age before quick exchange email. The response to his public request was overwhelming. The resulting 150,000 letters ranged from heartfelt to humorous, subjects ranging between lovers, relatives, and even an owner and a pet.
A letter from the latter read, “I can’t live without you. The loss feels deeper by the day.” Then ends with the words, “It is a pity you’re a cat.”
About 35,000 of the collected letters were used to plaster the outside of the building in a colorful mass of whites, reds, oranges, and blues, while about 115,000 more were found inside.


Check out artist Hikaru Cho > https://goo.gl/Wh3N9a .  He paints common foods to disguise them as other foods.  


Look at the works of historically significant artist Christo > http://christojeanneclaude.net/

Welsh-born artist and photographer Olsen Zander has been wrapping trees in white fabric around the UK for the better part of a decade. In this series entitled Tree, Line, Zander uses the fabric to reveal the horizon lines as they disappear behind the surface of trees. Really amazing work. If you liked this, also check out the mirrored tree installations of Joakim Kaminsky and Maria Poll. (via it’s nice that)















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