Above are 5th Grade student radial patterns reflecting on local community. These designs were created by students in Cupertino, California and were created for the Slot Shelters project. They are translated here into ATC cards (Artist Trading Cards). These cards will be exhibited in an exciting international student art show, Journey, at the Jurong Regional Library in Singapore in March 2012. Some of the Cupertino students created pattens reflecting on the industry which brought their families to journey to California. Other
students reflected on their heritage from distant lands and some reflected on the journey Cupertino has taken from agriculture to a technology driven community. It is an exciting opportunity for these students to participate in this innovative international student showcase! I learned about this project through the Art Education 2.0 NING, a wonderful resource for art educators around the world.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Monday, December 5, 2011
Laser Cutting Student Art in Steel
I am beginning to prep San Jose student works for laser cuttings for steel designs to be incorporated into freeway art. The student art will be traced in Illustrator and exported as CAD compatible files. A test file is being sent to the laser cutters to see if I correctly create the file. Keeping my fingers crossed!
Thursday, December 1, 2011
More Student Work for Freeeway Project
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Student Design Integration into Freeway Public Art
It is an interesting challenge to begin to explore ways to integrate student patterns into designs for concrete and laser cut metal. The freeway public art project that will incorporate student reflections on community is now at a phase where we need to address fabrication constraints. There will be metal "gateway" pillars and concrete wall patterns at the 101/Tulley and 101/Capitol Expressway freeway passes in San Jose, California built in April 2012. We are using Repper Pro to create the digital patterns from photos for some of the components.
Below are a few student sketches and beginning studies for fabrication. I am hoping that student statements about their designs will also be somehow linked at City of San Jose website.
Renaissance Academy, 6th Grade Student Radial Pattern sampling:
Below: rough concept studies for large laser cut metal patterns for gateway pillars. (Yes, ligatures are needed so that there are no floating pieces, but these sketches are simply for concept and need to be refined a lot for fabrication. Designs will be digitally re rendered as vector based files (in Illustrator) and exported as either .DWG or .DXF files (AutoCAD format) for laser cutting.
Each of three panel designs will fall along a theme of either food, culture/celebration or environment/nature. The pattern studies below draw from selected student paper designs and from student digital photo patterns created in Repper Pro.
Below are a few student sketches and beginning studies for fabrication. I am hoping that student statements about their designs will also be somehow linked at City of San Jose website.
Renaissance Academy, 6th Grade Student Radial Pattern sampling:
"Tamales" by Alyna C. |
"Viva la Comunidad de Mexico en San Jose" by Vanessa C. |
"Cherry Blossom" by Ayana J. |
"Nature Awaken" by Dominique |
"Hot Delicious Food" by Dung P. |
"Our Community of the Sun" by Luis C. |
"Las Paletas" by Anayolis R. |
Below: rough concept studies for large laser cut metal patterns for gateway pillars. (Yes, ligatures are needed so that there are no floating pieces, but these sketches are simply for concept and need to be refined a lot for fabrication. Designs will be digitally re rendered as vector based files (in Illustrator) and exported as either .DWG or .DXF files (AutoCAD format) for laser cutting.
Each of three panel designs will fall along a theme of either food, culture/celebration or environment/nature. The pattern studies below draw from selected student paper designs and from student digital photo patterns created in Repper Pro.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Surfboard Resin Applied to Food Wrapper Sculpture
I have begun to apply Everclear, a surfboard resin (with UV inhibitors) to the components of the Spring Thoughts sculpture. Man, is this stuff toxic smelling! I don't have a ventilated studio, but the driveway works well enough. The catalyst doesn't work in temperatures below 65 degrees and it is 66 outside so I had to work quickly in the sun. The main flower part I will coat with the resin tomorrow. The will be 38" x 42" and 1.25" deep and will be displayed against white fabric in a plexi glass box in the third floor elevator lobby of John Muir Hospital in Walnut Creek, California.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Spring Thoughts Sculpture; more process images
Central flower papered with origami paper and food wrappers as of 11/19/11 |
Leaves papered as of 11/19/11. |
Earlier process photo. |
Monday, November 14, 2011
Student Pattern Reflections on Community
In the past few weeks I have been working with the 6th Grade Students of Renaissance Academy in Alum Rock, San Jose, California. Renaissance Academy Art Instructor, Jesus Guerra, has been very generous in coordinating the class workshops times and in assisting with the computer art lab set up in his room for the digital pattern workshops. The students explored the visual identity of their local community in hand drawn radial pattern designs as well as in digital patterns created in Repper Pro photos they took of their community.
The resulting patterns will be added to the Slot Shelters project in both the library of card patterns for download and as pattern surface textures in Google SketchUp. The most exciting application of the student work is that a selection of these Renaissance student designs may be integrated in some format into the hardscape design of freeway exchange at 101 Tully and 101 Capitol Expressway. This landscape/construction project by the Office of Cultural Affairs of the City of San Jose, the VTA and HMH will be completed in April 2012.
This project was made possible by a generous loan of laptop computers by the Krause Center for Innovation at Foothill College.
Below are a sampling of the student designs. Student statements about each pattern will accompany the designs.
The resulting patterns will be added to the Slot Shelters project in both the library of card patterns for download and as pattern surface textures in Google SketchUp. The most exciting application of the student work is that a selection of these Renaissance student designs may be integrated in some format into the hardscape design of freeway exchange at 101 Tully and 101 Capitol Expressway. This landscape/construction project by the Office of Cultural Affairs of the City of San Jose, the VTA and HMH will be completed in April 2012.
This project was made possible by a generous loan of laptop computers by the Krause Center for Innovation at Foothill College.
Below are a sampling of the student designs. Student statements about each pattern will accompany the designs.
Onions
This photo is
of onions on a grill.
This represents
my community because when you pass by any market or home it is always the smell
of carne and onions.
|
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Thoughts on the 100 Cups of Anne Smith
Illustration by Anne Smith. All rights reserved ( http://www.annesmith.net/ ) |
Around the same time I discovered Anne Smith's work, I was contacted by Rasteriods Design in San Jose regarding a public art project of a fence wrap to go around a construction site of several block in Japantown, San Jose, California. These few blocks were once Heinlenville, the last of six Chinatowns in San Jose. I thought it would be really interesting to invite artists to each paint a cup reflecting some part of history of this area, as many fragments of tea cups and rice bowl were found in the site excavation conducted by Sonoma State Anthropological Studies Center.
It is the early stages of the conceptual ideas for the fence wrap and I think the theme of the designs will take a different turn, but I will tuck away in my mind the idea of cups for future projects. So often in these excavations, the echos of the past lives of Chinese and Japanese immigrants are in the form of pottery shards. Anchoring public art imagery in this site to tea cups or rice bowls both references historical relevant artifacts and creates a theme around objects poetically representing spaces to be filled with ideas and memories.
Below: Digital textile design I created from a Heinlenville shard fragment of a Japanese rice bowl and below that an image of the fence wrap site in Japantown, San Jose.
Spring Thoughts Sculpture
I am in the process of creating a 38" x 42" floral sculpture commission for a hospital in the San Francisco Bay Area. I am working with Roundtree Visuals on this project. The piece will be completed and delivered by December 1st, 2011 for framing and installation.
Step 3: The beginnings of the leaves, stems and vine elements. |
Step 4: Most of twisted wire form is completed. I am beginning to paper the form. |
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