Sunday, December 6, 2009

Pictures of my farm ^^

Just some pics I took over the thanksgiving holidays while I was at home.


This is my big sister Holly and my niece Trina. Holly's making a funny face because I put the flash on purposely to mess with her eyes.

This is my nephew Joey and my mom. Momma looks like Audrey Hepburn, but she won't believe me.


The guy in the recliner is my dad. If you're wondering why he has that thing wrapped around him, it's from his latest surgery. Dad's heart has been failing him a lot in the past year. He just found out he had congestive heart failure and he had 7 blockages in his heart. Last year they had to do a bypass surgery on him and usually they can only do four, so somehow they got it to work with four. However, the surgery failed to correct the problems with his heart, so they just recently had to put in a pacemaker. So the thing he's wearing is to keep him from moving his arm too much and accidentally yanking the wires out.

The guy in the picture next to him is my little brother Drew with my GSP Beau. Beau's pretty afraid of electronic devices for some reason. He gets over it pretty soon though, ha ha.






The older dog is Rebel, also a german shorthaired pointer. They're a pretty rare breed.


Annnnnnnnnnnd these are all my chickens. We jokingly call them the army of darkness. If you have food you better run, 'cause they come chasing you.





These are my horses Delilah, Smoke, Dragon, and Sweet Baby. The older ones are a pain in the behind, but the baby is really sweet and she's really soft too. They're a mix of apaloosa and shetland pony. You can really see the shetland more in the baby.





And that's it. Hope you enjoyed. I used to have geese as well, but it seems they've betrayed us for the neighbors. They're staying at their house now. They were embdens, not canadian. Embdens are the white domestic geese.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Final project

Before I talk about this last project, let me reiterate that I was not at all happy with this piece. It was a big disappointment and a complete flop. I did not appreciate the few people who chose to insult this as if they've never experienced any failures with their own work before. I was already embarrassed enough as it was without that. I was expecting a harsh critique and didn't expect nor was I prepared for this behavior. I know that's part of what happens in the real world, but I've never had a project turn out this bad before and I did not have the patience for the immaturity of these comments and they really were uncalled for, even as it continued after the critique was over.

The piece that most of you saw me working on the majority of the time was the wire tree. I wanted to do some kind of piece that involved using recycled materials and making them into something beautiful, since most people find them to be ugly and either just throw them out or just recycle them. I had originally planned to do a little garden, but thought that to be too mundane and after some research, I discovered the wire tree. Albeit they are usually much smaller and made as little decorative jewelry pieces, I decided to see if I could use the same method and make a lifesize one.

The following are just a few pictures of what it looked like when I was first starting it. I don't have any more than that because I forgot to take pictures as I continued to work, plain and simple, so, yeah, my fault. But basically, as you can see, I twisted the wire together, and as it got bigger, I had to manually twist them together.









Everyone asked what had happened to the tree. Problem was that I should've figured that wire is too flimsy by itself. However, I thought that if I wrapped it with more wire it would become sturdy enough to stand. Wow, how wrong I was. Putting more wire on more wire doesn't do anything but make it heavier. It was still flimsy. By this time I realized this and tried to make wooden legs for it to stand and then attach a dowel rod inside of the void created from wrapping around the legs. When I tried to put the tree into the tree base, the base cracked and I knew it was too heavy and I didn't know what else I could try. Rather than come into class the next day and completely embarrass myself with a tree that wouldn't even stand, I abandoned the project and took all the little flowers and leaves that were supposed to fill out the tree limbs and just made them into a little garden. And thus it came to be the crappy sculpture you see now.



























Needless to say, I was thoroughly pissed with myself. I thought I was doing much better in this class than in my last sculpture class, and to end the semester with a sculpture this bad was really embarrassing for me and just a really big let down. I know everyone always says the whole, "If I had more time, I would've done this...", and this'll be the first time I'm saying it. If I could go back and redo this sculpture, I think I'd probably try building the tree trunk out of styrofoam and wrapping the wire around that, and it would've been a lot more stable and light. I believe I will try this because I really would like some closure on this project. The second piece I made came out the best because I had enough time to start over from scratch and fix all the problems that had occured before.

...Wow, I think this is the most I've ever written in any of my blogs. Ah well, it's always the really bad ones that get all the talk, no? It's always hard to think about what you want to say in front of an audience, but at least in the blog I can write everything out. ^^;; Everyone has their triumphs and failures, and for me this was a really big one. If any good came from this, it was the fact that it was a good lesson to me and I feel like I have a little more knowledge and experience with the material so that if I choose to work with it again, I might be able to manipulate it better. Sorry I blabbed so much, but this is just something I really had to get out. Thank you for your comments and I hope you guys have a wonderful and safe holiday vacation.

Iron pour project

The wax mold came out really nice. Here's the pics of the results. Enjoy.









Thursday, November 5, 2009

Wax casting sculpture

I forgot to get some pictures while I was making it this time, so here's the sculpture when it was already gated and vented. After that I have some pictures of when I was taking the rings off of it after the sand had been rammed into and around it. The idea for this piece was for it to be something light and bouyant, but light can also mean something fun and playful. I went with that route and as I worked with the sculpture, it ended up looking something like a dinosaur, I think. I really liked the look and decided to bring it out a bit more to look like that and added little spines on the head and bumpy spots for the skin. It makes me think of an abstract version of those plastic dinosaurs we all played with as children, so in that, yes, I think the concept has been successful. Children are innocent (at least some are, ha ha; certainly not my nephew and niece ^^;;) and playful, and the dinosaur is a reminder of that age when we were the most lighthearted.