Category: Uncategorized
Edit Workshop
Drawing Machine
Object Workshop
Thomas Hirschhorn
‘Best known for his sculptural constructions produced from disposable mass manufactured goods…Hirschhorn uses everyday and found materials such as plastic sheeting, cardboard, aluminium, packing tape and magazine images to create a dystopian reality.’ (Stephen Friedman)
I think the way Hirschhorn uses found materials to produce his sculptures creates a really interesting accessibility within his work. The fact that he uses cardboard, aluminium and other everyday objects I think allows the viewer to relate more and to imagine how it may have been made. The fact that the making process is also visible in some work further emphasises the relationship between the viewer and the art.
sources :
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/thomas-hirschhorn-6254
https://www.stephenfriedman.com/artists/thomas-hirschhorn/
Zimoun
‘Zimoun combines ordinary objects (including cardboard boxes, plastic bags, and old furniture) with mechanical components (such as dc-motors, wires, microphones, speakers, and ventilators) to create extraordinary hybrid sculptures that fuse the normative order of generative systems with the disorder of random events.‘ (Anna Albritton for Sculpture Magazine)
I think that ZImoun’s sculptures are really interesting, the way he combines physical sculpture with sonic sculptures evokes an interesting question about what is sculpture and what qualifies as sculpture, eg is sound sculpture? By combining sound with carboard boxes I think that Zimoun creates sonic sculpture which, alongside the 3D element of his work, is really compelling.
sources :
https://www.sculpture.org/documents/scmag13/apr_13/fullfeature.shtml
John Gibbons
I think the way Gibbons creates sculpture out of metal is really interesting. He uses stainless steel and copper to create pieces of work that seem delicate yet robust at the same time – the thin, detailed works still have a sense of weight to them due to his use of metal which I think is compelling. Gibbons said of his work ‘the inside for me…is the important part…how the inside and the outside interact with each other’. I think that this is clear from the work, in particular those pieces that have a lot of negative space where the negative and positive seem to react to each other.
sources :
https://www.johngibbons.org.uk/?page=sculpture&album=5
https://www.johngibbons.org.uk/?page=interview
Copy Workshop
Michael Craig-Martin
I really like the way Craig-Martin overlaps lines and letters to create interesting new shapes within the words. I think his use of colour is also very effective, in particular I think the pieces were he uses colour over black is very dynamic and vibrant. I think that I want to try and incorporate this sense of overlaying and colour in my own work.
sources :
https://www.tate.org.uk/search?aid=955&type=artwork
Felix Gonzalez-Torres
‘One of a number of works comprising stacks of paper that Gonzalez-Torres produced beginning in 1989, “Untitled” (Death by Gun) was conceived as a nine-inch stack presented directly on the floor and endlessly replenished, thus ensuring that it can be distributed indefinitely. Visitors are encouraged to read the sheets and take them away to keep, display, or give to others.’
I think the art of distribution as a focus of this piece of work by Gonzalez-Torres. One of the reasons for creating prints is they are easy to replicate and produce in large quantities meaning they can be distributed widely and cheaply. With this piece of work Gonzalez-Torres explores the idea of making distribution art, which I think is really interesting.
sources :
https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/4971
Alphabets and fonts
I really like the way these letters read – I think there is something interesting about the geometric shapes that are created within the letters by adding extra lines and I want to try and incorporate this within my work
Tomas Saraceno
Tomas Saraceno
Mentioned in lecture Craft and Concept
Show at Palais de Tokyo, Paris
Tomas Saraceno displays these cubic frames featuring spiders webs in his exhibition in the Palais de Tokyo. His work is focused on concept; he himself hasn’t done any craft to produce this work, rather it has all been done for him. You could say that his concept is someone else’s craft.
I think that the delicate weaving done by the spiders is beautiful and intricate yet ambiguous. As Krystoff mentioned in the lecture at first you don’t realise what it is – it is not clear that the threads are spider’s silk and I think there is something intriguing in this sense of mystery – not knowing what the material is.
sources :
https://www.palaisdetokyo.com/en/event/carte-blanche-tomas-saraceno
https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/d74ykv/enter-the-cosmic-spiderweb-sculptures-of-tomas-saraceno
Artist Talk : Ann-marie James
Edit Workshop









The Chilis go for a bit of a mixture with this video. To some degree, it looks like something a YouTuber could make at home, yet contains serious professional elements to it. This video succeeds from the beginning because of this, with the clever intro, where the viewer enters the video from a yellow tube, sort of like entering the gateway into the wacky, alternate world of the Chili Peppers. From there, were greeted by everything, from the band carrying lights on their backs to playing in front of a giant orange wall. Then there’s John Frusciante (guitar) wearing a purple hippo head and of course, Anthony Kiedis in the end fixated into a brick wall.’ (Alex Young for Consequences of Sound, 2008)




Drawing Machine












