Tuesday, 25 February 2014

The Miller's Daughter

Mixed Media
January 26, 2014


I have been recently working on the idea that many of our old fairy tales have great parables about the plight of humankind. Very often I read stories of a woman who is placed in an impossible and oppressive position and felt that it was representative of women issues contemporarily and in history. This first painting using this idea representing the miller's daughter in Rumpelstiltskin.

It is mixed media using oil paints, gold pen on black gesso, lights, and melted plastic beads. It was first show cased at the FinneyWood Art walk on Valentine's Day, 2014.

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

MFA Final Piece






In my final year of my Masters I went in a different direction from the social media concept of art collaboration. I decided to organize workshops with groups of 2 to 8 people. These workshops lasted for about 2 hours where I provided food and drink and instructions on how to make paper beads. 

In these paper beads I asked my participants to write something they thought was meaningful. It could be anything they wanted, maybe even a drawing. Sometimes they took this request and wrote sarcastic or shallow remarks and others took it more seriously and wrote secrets or deep questions. I did 8 workshops in the United States, Scotland, England and Lebanon using dictaphones to audio record the conversations with the participants' permission. 

With the audio that I collected, I sat through and listened to everything. In all of the discussions, I realized a few things: that the bigger the group, the more shallow and light-hearted the conversations became while the smaller and more intimate the groups, the more serious and personal the conversations were. I found 6 different broad subject matters that I felt best encompassed the feel of all of the workshops, and the mini cultures that developed during those workshops.

The subjects that I found were culture/location, music/personal, art, me, politics, and romance/relationships. I edited all of the audio and mixed all of the conversations together. I then put them on 6 individual MP3 players connected to headphones. For my installation in my MFA show, I placed all the beads that were made in previous workshops on a dining room table with the headsets placed at each chair, along with instructions on how to make paper beads. Viewers coming to the show could either listen to the conversations, and/or make more paper beads. 

Culture, Location
Music, Personal
   
Art

Me

Politics

Romance, Relationships


The response that I received from both participants in workshops and viewers at the show were not only positive but met with excitement. I found that creativity, human interaction and conversation are essential for people to feel color and life into their existence. For a fully rounded person one must have art as apart of their life. 

Saturday, 21 September 2013

Medusa and Family Tree

At the beginning of my last semester of my masters at Edinburgh College of Art I instigated workshops where I had small groups of people (between 2 to 7 people) create paper beads while writing something they thought was meaningful inside. Here is a link to my tumblr for that project. As an experiment I created images out of the beads they created that I felt represented the overall feel of their conversations.

 Medusa and Feminism
Beads on Cork board
February 2013

Family Tree
Beads on Cork board
February 2013

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

Murmur


Murmur
photography and video collaboration
November 2012

In the fall of 2012, I collaborated with a photography MFA major who took panoramic shots of a specific location in Edinburgh over a period of a week. I then spliced the images together creating three different quicktime videos and projected them on the walls of our gallery space. The images morphed and changed based on the time of day and weather, creating a surreal experience of someone actually being in that particular location.





The Saint of Leith

While living in Edinburgh, I was inspired by a story about the Scots' local saint, St. Triduana. Rather than marrying a Pictish King who was in love with her eyes, she pulled out her eyes and spiked them with a thorn vine and sent them to him. She did this so that she could dedicate her life to God. 

The Saint of Leith
Mixed-Media on Panel
August 2012

My Burden

My Burden
Multi-Media
January 2012 

Portrait of Uganda


Portrait of Uganda
Video Collage
December 2011


Once I arrived in Edinburgh, I decided to create a collage out of footages of Uganda and their troubles, trials, and even just daily life. I aimed to create an abstracted image of someone, perhaps a Ugandan? Or maybe anyone?