Skip to main content

3D to 2D

Blue Bird


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

On Longing

Sentence 5: “The place of orgin must remain unavailable in order for desire to be generated.”  This post on my Instagram is of an abandon dock back at my home in Palm Harbor, FL. I used to go to that dock all the time to sit and listen to music. Sometimes my friends would even go with me and we’d just sit there and talk. I wish I could go back there as frequently as I do, I truly miss it.   Sentence 4: “Nostalgia cannot be sustained without loss.” I took this statement very literally. This is a picture I took and posted on my Facebook of my dear friend Cameron. He died last year unexpectedily. This picture gives me an odd and unsettling feeling of nostalgia, and a time and place I can never return to.  Sentence 2: “The souvenir reduces the public, the monumentous, the three dimensional, into the miniature that which can be enveloped by the body.”  I found this picture of a Polaroid on my Instagram. It’s in and of itself a souvenir of a whole time in my life. “Spring

Masking Tape Shoes

Masking Tape Shoes “Converse” Masking Tape Height: 6” Length: 11” Width: 4”

Memento

Memento “Blue Bird” balsa wood, blue acrylic paint, blue feathers Height: 2 1/2” Length: 6” Width: 2 3/4” Artist Statement: This piece was created as tribute to a friend of mine who passed away two years ago. I remember he had the biggest and brightest blue eyes and that inspired me to choose the monochromatic color scheme for my sculpture. It’s entirely morbid, but the box is constructed so that it appears to resemble the shape of a rectangular coffin. I used the feathers to symbolize him as a blue bird escaping to another place free and at peace.  Research:  http://socks-studio.com/2014/12/08/i-grew-up-here-but-i-never-felt-entirely-part-of-it-marco-tirellis-tiny-sculptures/ I was inspired by this artist, Marco Tirelli, who was posted on the momento blog artist section. His work inspired me because of his minamalistic ability to convey space.  http://foundations3ddesign.blogspot.com/2016/05/sarah-sommer-student-work.html?m=0 I loved the wo