Monday, 24 June 2013

Introduction to screen printing

                                       


Andy Warhol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Andy Warhol (August 6, 1928 – February 22, 1987) was an American artist who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art. His works explore the relationship between artistic expression, celebrity culture and advertisement that flourished by the 1960s. After a successful career as a commercial illustrator, Warhol became a renowned and sometimes controversial artist. The Andy Warhol Museum in his native city, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, holds an extensive permanent collection of art and archives. It is the largest museum in the United States dedicated to a single artist.
Warhol's art encompassed many forms of media, including hand drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, silk screening, sculpture, film, and music. He was also a pioneer in computer-generated art using Amiga computers that were introduced in 1984, two years before his death. He founded Interview Magazine and was the author of numerous books, including The Philosophy of Andy Warhol and Popism: The Warhol Sixties. He is also notable as a gay man who lived openly as such before the gay liberation movement. His studio, The Factory, was a famous gathering place that brought together distinguished intellectuals, drag queens, playwrights, Bohemian street people, Hollywood celebrities, and wealthy patrons.
Warhol has been the subject of numerous retrospective exhibitions, books, and feature and documentary films. He coined the widely used expression "15 minutes of fame". Many of his creations are very collectible and highly valuable. The highest price ever paid for a Warhol painting is US$100 million for a 1963 canvas titled Eight Elvises. The private transaction was reported in a 2009 article in The Economist, which described Warhol as the "bellwether of the art market".[1] Warhol's works include some of the most expensive paintings ever sold.






Marilyn Monroe 

Andy Warhol what i love about his work it's exciting to look at it's delightful. I also painted a artwork of one of his paintings Marilyn Monroe. It wasn't that easy to paint but i'm still practising to learn more techniques to paint. It's interesting how his paintings are about food products and pop stars. My favourite artwork of his will be Marilyn Monroe because how it's captivating and how she's famous. I also love her quotes my favourite quote of her's will be “We should all start to live before we get too old. Fear is stupid. So are regrets.” .. The reason why this is my favourite quote of her's because it sometimes help's me when i'm having panic attacks , anxiety problems it's a really hard thing to go through. Andy Warhol paintings are very pleasing i like how he works with different bright colours something different from all artist. Sometime's i sit and wonder how does he do his artwork does he paint it or screen print or hand draw? So I searched Andy Warhol's artwork his art encompassed many forms of media, including hand drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, silk screening, sculpture, film, and music. He was also a pioneer in computer-generated art using amiga computers were introduced in 1984, two years after his death. His works explore the relationship between artistic expression, celebrity culture and advertisement that flourished by the 1960s. After a successful career as a commercial illustrator, Warhol became a renowned and sometimes controversial artist.

Introduction to screen printing


                 

                                     Emma Mclellan






The concepts of the grotesque and hybridisation have always piqued human interest. From the mythical gryphon - with its leonine torso mated to the wings and head of an eagle - to science fiction fantasies of android life, the fascination with otherworldly creations runs a darker thread through the annals of human life. As expected, these musings lend themselves to representation in cultural media and we can track a certain history of art - from Hieronymus Bosch through medieval bestiary to Patricia Piccinini - that comments on our fascination with the weird and ungodly. Viewed from this perspective, Emma McLellan's work is a contemporary interpretation of an age-old fascination.
McLellan attended Auckland University's Elam School of Fine Arts, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts majoring in Printmaking in 1993, before continuing on to compete a Masters of Fine Arts in Painting in 2001. The result of her affinity for these dual disciplines is a natural combination of the two that allows her to build multiple layers of colour, pattern and image, all the while seeking to conceal and reveal different elements of the composition. McLellan combines her fascination with the grotesque, the weird and the hybrid (drawn from an interest in the engraving techniques that produced works of medieval bestiary) and her love of the pattern, repetition and texture of antique fabrics and wallpapers to create a gallery of animalia laid out as if it were as innocuous a thing as a repeating wallpaper motif.
The effect of McLellan's approach to the repetition of curiosities is to generate a "second-glance" interest, whereby the sumptuousness of pattern draws the viewer into a closer examination of subject matter. It is here that McLellan's work begins to draw allusions on one level to print metaphors (replica, edition, copy) and at a deeper level to the concept of mutation and its introduction of newness, difference and diversity into a genetic pool - a concept that is often viewed in a negative light and which has lead to the pejorative connotations of the term 'mutant'. It is this idea of difference that is both societally unacceptable yet culturally fascinating and McLellan holds up her grotesque and hybridised animals for inspection in the same manner as one would inspect a museum oddity.
McLellan lives and works in Auckland. She lectures in printmaking and is currently the Programme Leader for the Bachelor of Visual Arts degree at Auckland University's Manukau School of Visual Arts. McLellan's work has been exhibited as far afield as France, Canada, Spain and Bulgaria and she continues to produce work from her Auckland studio.

Ex famillia muris II 
                                          Acrylic & screenprint on board , 500mm x 500mm 



Counting your chickens before 
                                         Screenprint & acrylic on board , 900mm x 900mm 



Emma Mclellan artwork is so exquisite it's captivating I was so surprise once I saw her artwork on the slideshow that she showed to our class made me focus more about screen print. I love the background it's enthralling i really like the vintage patterns . It's really creative using the animals and adding a different looking wings onto the chickens. I find her artwork really interesting you can see it in books and animation movie's. The counting your chickens before screen print is enticing the way she fade's the chicken on the screen print. Her screen print makes me want to learn more about screen print also learn more technique with screen printing. It's really clever of her repeating the patterns and the chickens onto the screen print it makes it so interesting to look at it also showing us it's telling a story behind this artwork. It's interesting how screen prints works my first time doing screen prints was in intermediate screen printings on bags also clothes but we didn't learn that much techniques about screen prints here in M.I.T that's why i love M.I.T you learn so much things about art and enjoy designing and seeing other students works give's you more idea's. 

Monday, 17 June 2013

Manipulating the image

Manipulating the image 





Francis Pesamino 


FACE TO FACE / KANOHI KI TE KANOHI / FA'AFESAGA'I (Frankfurt Book Fair 2012)

Francis Pesamino is a Samoan artist who grew up in New Zealand. He graduated fromManukau Institute of Technology in 2011 and recently exhibited at Mangere Arts Center in South Auckland.This is his first exhibition in Europe.
In his work Pesamino places a powerful focus on the significance of his own cultural identity. He uses hand-drawn typography to paint portraits of prominent Samoan and New Zealand community leaders and sport personalities. On closer inspection, his graphic style highlights the contradictory character traits, inner and outer compulsions and sensibilities of those represented – they are quite literally written in their faces.
Pesamino’s complex pen-and-ink drawings are exhibited alongside historical artefacts from the Weltkulturen Museum’s Polynesian collection. All of these items make reference to the subject of tattooing, just as Pesamino’s portraits also evoke associations with the form and content of this Polynesian body art. Elaborate patterns imprinted onto the skin are legible signs of a person’s descent and of their social and family status. The tattoos that adorn the faces of Maori men in New Zealand are especially striking. This style of ornamentation, like the typography in Pesamino’s portraits, follows the natural contours of the face. The most popular tattoo patterns of groups from other Pacific islands cover the human body so completely and fluidly that they almost look like writing on the skin. One particularly outstanding example is the ornamentation found in body tattoos from the Marquesas Islands, which with its strict angular shapes, reads like a text written in upper-case letters.
Francis Pesamino writes:
“I think of my drawings as a representation not only of things within Samoan culture and its people, but also the outside perspectives of how Samoan culture is perceived in the Modern World, whether it be through stereotypes, and recognisable high-profile Samoans portrayed through the media, all of which inform the way Samoan people identify themselves. My drawings are presented in a manner that articulates my position of in-betweenness.
The way in which I want people to view my work is through visual story telling. It is up to the viewer to not only decipher who the people depicted in the drawings are, but also through reading the constructed words, they are able to create a narrative of that person, as well as of the way they are being portrayed. This in turn influences the way Samoan people are viewed, both inside and outside of the culture.”
Curated by Dr. Eva Raabe, Research Curator, Weltkulturen Museum.
Kindly supported by the Government of New Zealand through the Cultural Diplomacy International Fund.








What we have been doing is looking for magazines looking for image to trace. We used the tracing paper to the outline of the image then writing lettering's one the image. So what I have done is finding a image from the magazine and I have found one from the fashion magazine and once i went half way drawing the image of my first work i didn't start to like it all because i just didn't like the way it turn out it just looked weird that i haven't draw her eyes properly. Then i moved on to my next one finding a another image from the same magazine and i just finish of working from it and it turn out ok it wasn't that as the first drawing. It wasn't easy at all being creating finding words to go with the image.    

Manipulating the image



                                                 Manipulating the image 
                                             (WEEK 4)




On week 4 we were been working on designing magazines so we were told to design a magazine with our own picture's not other famous images so i used this image of my uncle because it means a lot to me this day i was practicing using my new LCD camera taking photo's of my father & uncle playing golf this was the last time i get to play golf before he passed away this year. I'm so glad that I took my camera with me while at the time so much memories. 





So here's a my magazine that I have deigned. I used Photoshop to work on my deigned. I actually enjoy designing this magazine it was fun. We have told to designed a magazine of any topic like Food, Fashion or sports etc.. And i have chosen this image because it came into my mind when I've herd we have to design a magazine so i work on sports magazine a Golf magazine. I started on looking for what to write on my magazine also the front. So i came up with 101 top tips , Add some pro. Then adding another image down the bottom on the magazine and finishing it of with a barcode from the internet. 



Screen printings

                                               Screen printings 

                                                                   WEEK 7  








On the 10/06/13 we been working on our screen printings. We started of from drawing or working on photoshop to design our poster. Then we went to the printing room to clean our stencil board also putting on a coat of paint onto a board and took it into a dark room for it to dry. After we waited we moved on working with our design before we go back to the printing room. So we started using the big machine that vacums and print our artwork onto the board. It was interesting seeing how the machine works. Now i just need to start on printing of my poster. I didn't really enjoy cleaning the stencil board it took time washing the paint off.