Jason C
LOL
This was as self portrait that I did of myself. I feel like it really shows the more traditional side of me than not a lot of people get to see. I also like to kill wolves in my free time. No biggie. (done in ink)
Confusion
I started out dripping different watercolors down the canvas. After that I splattered paint on the canvas I let it dry over night, I used a stencil to draw the letter then broke the letters to show more of the aspect of "Confusion." I colored the letters in with paint pens, then drew arrows shooting out of them to show misdirection.
3 Pieces of creativeness
Ta-da!
Double Rainbow All the Way!
5 DAYS TILL FREEDOM!!!!!!
Today's assignment:
2. Turn in 10 edited slides to the drop box.
This is piece by Christina Entcheva. She works mainly with ink on paper. I would describe her work as intricate and abstract. Something really strikes me about the way she uses the human form (and sometimes animals) and uses such an array of lines and design to morph them. I’ve always liked very detailed pieces and abstract pieces, and she puts both of those together. This kind of inspires me to be a little brave and try a piece that is outside of my comfort zone.
Aaron Smith
MAO YANYANG
MAO YANYANG is an oil painter. he's preety goot at eet. i would say that his artwork is best described as being contemporary. he uses realistic art and as a reoccuring theme, puts in microphones in all his art. i like how my homeboy MAO, has actual skill but also brings about humour in his art. he will influence my art by maybe inspiring me to put a humourous side to it.
LOL
Unity and Variety
Jesse Reno!
Breaking News: Evergreen AP Art's Choir Has Beiber Fever!
This is an acrylic painting on canvas paper that I did over the summer. I kind of had this weird kick with paper cranes, which proved ironic considering the first assignment in AP art turned out to pertain to oragami. Yes, I painted that whole background myself. Yes, it took a long time.
I also had this strange obsession with this acrylic cerulean paint I bought in June. I painted a ton of things in monochromatic, but for this I thought that a drippy red scarf would contrast the blue considerably. In all actuality, I just got lazy and had fun with it. I don't regret it. It's not my strongest summer work, and it needs a new slide.
Here's another example of my obsession with the cerulean paint. It was actually layered about a thousand times on bristol paper. It's the first painting I did over the summer. Also needs a new slide.
Judith Brauns
Judith Braun
Judith Brauns makes her artwork by dipping her fingers in charcoal, sometimes both hands simultaneously. She says "In this way they are gestural inscriptions of my body, developing a vocabulary of mark making with these simple means." There are no obvious objects in her artwork, just a flow of body language that she puts down on paper. What i like about this artist is that she is original and is not using a method that somebody else came up with. She branches out and designs her own unique style. Judith Brauns inspires me to be more original and to make more pieces of art work that I came up with, not somebody elses ideas. By looking at her artwork it shows that the art work that you come up with and that you can relate to can potentialy be youre best artwork you've ever made, or anybodys seen. The artwork that comes from you, and your experiences shows your life and your feelings not somebody elses.