This coming year is going to be so hectic, but also fun. I'm going to be working on my thesis for studio art, putting together a body of work and then presenting those pieces in a show in the spring. I'll also be writing, editing, and managing the school newspaper.
Which is to say, if I seem to be ignoring this blog, I'm sorry.
This spring and summer have been fantastic. I've really seen an evolution in my artwork and it's been so exciting. I've been experimenting with new print-making techniques: line etching, aquatint, mezzo-tint, soft-ground etching, hard-ground etching, sugar-lift, and dry-point. I've also been working on making a series of wire rings, and oil paintings.
For my print-making fellowship I created a series of prints exploring the characteristics of design, including color, shape, and texture, that allow us to recognize and classify different minerals.
As I mentioned in a previous post, I spent the spring semester creating a series paintings based on stages of depression as I experiences them. The first in the series is still listed in the previous post, the rest are below.
Here's a few photos of what I've been working on...
Agate Stone
sugar-lift
Wulfenite
mezzotint
Manganite
mezzotint, line-etching, sugar-lift
Botryoidal Hematite
dry-point, soft-ground etch
Galena
aquatint, line-etching
A childhood self-portrait
oil on canvas
Portrait of my brother
oil on canvas
Girl on King-Arthur's Seat
oil on canvas
Depression Series: Neurotic disparity
Acrylic, Liquitex, paint pen
Depression Series: Regression
acrylic, rope pieces, Liquitex mediums
Depression Series: Recovery
Acrylic on canvas
T.T.F.N.
T.T.F.N.







I love your print of Wulfenite. It is quite interesting to see the dimensions that you've created with the printing technique
ReplyDeleteThanks chica!
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