Material options

The first material that I have looked into using for my sculpture was foam board.

It is a good material in terms of sticking photographs onto it, and is also easily available to buy meaning the cost of the sculpture will not be to high – something I need to consider when looking into different materials to use. This particular foam board is 5mm thick, which is perfect for creating the desired layered effect I want within my final piece.

One set back to using foam board is how easily it can shapes. I order to create the body shape I will need to sculpt the material into different shapes and layers. Although I believe it can be done, it will take time to ensure that the end result does not look messy.

IMG_1594.JPG

Stages of Depression – Zoe Johnson

The work produced by Zoe Johnson is to make people aware of the stigma surrounding mental health. Each piece of work is made to be viewed in a silent situation – making the viewers feel uncomfortable. This allows the viewer to experience how mental health sufferers feel when stigmatised. The idea of viewing the work is silence is especially important to the work. Not only does it make the viewer feel uncomfortable, but highlights the silence of the sculputres – representing how mental health sufferers often suffer in silence. Johnson, through her work, shows different ways in which people can feel when suffering from a mental illness, specifically depression.

  • 1

e029eb26059669.5634efa855502.jpeg

5bd1b526059669.5634efa858ba8The first stage that Johnson represents within her work is Guilt. The guilt of having a mental illness, especially if you do not have a necessarily have a reason. The flesh like colours used within the work gives a feeling of rawness, representing how mental illness can have such a painful effect on the sufferer.

  • 2

96814f26059669.5634efa875eac.jpeg

f1e00a26059669.5634efa881e98The second stage represented is emptiness. This shows both the physical and emotional feeling of emptiness. There is a link within this piece of work to eating disorders, yet the feeling of loneliness is common across all mental illnesses. This stage is especially relatable to me as I suffer from social anxiety. I often feel lonely, yet because of my disorder I find it hard to socialise – creating an endless problem I cannot seem to recover from.

The third stage represented is exhaustion. Suffering from a mental illness means you can constantly feeling exhausted. It is interesting for me how only part of the body is used within this work – the rest appearing to be ‘missing’. This links with the feeling of being unable to function which is talked about in the next stage.

  • 4

dc5dea26059669.5634efa86845eThe fourth step is the feeling of slipping. With any mental illness you can feel as if you do not have the ability to function any longer. As the artist describes it is like coming closer to death. Every aspect of your life is effected when suffering from a mental illness, not simply your thoughts.

  • 5

8071ea26059669.5634efa86bbce.jpegFinally is the idea of being pulled up – the idea of recovering. This is an important message to me to get across. The help of other people has such a massive impact on those recovering from mental illness. The work is different from the others in the project. Where the rest of the work can be seen in quite a negative way, this plays on the idea of hope at the end of a mental illness.

Don’t let me explode – Frank L Tybush

Sculpture is something that I personally haven’t experimented with myself, and therefore wanted to look into other sculptures that have been regarding mental health.

‘Don’t let me explode’ 

fff3ac37722711.574a3a0b9772a

The work produced by Frank L Tybush was produced to show the ways that people cope with depression. The three sculptures are individually named ‘The cutter’, ‘The purger’ and ‘The Puncher’.

What drew me to this work was the use of ‘people’, something that I want to use in my work. Mental health is such a personal issue that the idea of using the human body as a way to represent a message feels best suited to me. The work also shows how many different ways there are to cope with a mental illness – showing how mental illness is a complex issue and needs to be understood more deeply.

I am also intrigued by the way the sculptures have been made without any detail on their face. This gives them a sense of wanting to be hidden – the same way somebody may feel when suffering with a mental disorder. This links with my previous module where I did not show my face within self portraits, leading me to introduce a mask that became a representation of how I mask my true self.

 

 

Group Experimentation

MaskWithin my other module – research and context – we were told to bring an object that helped us work in a creative way. I decided to bring the mask that I had used within my previous module, which was used for my self portraiture work.

We worked with other people in the group – fine artists and illustration students-  to create a piece of art using the different materials everybody had bought with them. We covered the mask with tissue paper and bark from trees to create a surreal piece of artwork.

I found the process of producing this art work interesting for a number of reasons:

  • I find my work is progressing into more fine art photography, and find that working the the fine art students has influenced this. It was great to work with them for a short time, not only seeing how they work, but understanding their thought process a lot more.
  • I’m looking into covering different objects with either paper or other materials and found this the perfect oppurtunity to practice. It was intersting to see how different materials stuck and worked with the mask where others didn’t. It was also interesting using bark as a material because it introduced the idea of nature into the work. Within my last projects I combined self portraits with landscape pictures, which was something I had never considered before, and is something I would like to carry on experimenting with.

 

 

 

Practicing Decopatch

The idea of decopatch is something I have wanted to experiment with for a while, and I felt this module was the perfect opportunity to begin to do this. As I have never actually created anything using the method before, I began covering a mask, which was the theme within my last project.

I used paper with two different designs on them, tearing them into smaller pieces and sticking them down, slightly overlapping each one. The paper was surprisingly easy to work with, especially on raised parts. If I continue to use this method, I would want to use photographs instead of patterned paper. It would also need to be easy to work with, not changing the appearance of the image.

Below are the final results from my first time experimenting with decopatch: