Sunday, 10 December 2017

Leo's Slab Project

Leo's Slab Project 




THE SLAB PROJECT

What was your thought process?

When I first started thinking about creating a slab with additional clay that had been imprinted or scored onto it, I thought it would be a fairly quick and simple process. However, I had no idea what I wanted to base my project on, and so I went for a simplistic idea of creating a turtle shell, however I soon realized that that would be too easy, and so I went for creating a 3-dimensional project and created a cylinder. However that didn't work out, so I contemplated my options and decided to go with a basket. I liked the 3-D idea, but I couldn't create a cylinder, so I created a rectangular prism. One I had a good basket styled starting point, I thought about what to add to it, and thus I came up with the idea of drawing the product moment correlation coefficient equation onto the side of the basket and a bunch of 1's and 0's in a binary styled format to symbolize these things being thrown away. While this project might seem a bit 'different' than typical projects, I had come up with a project that symbolized my attitude to some things I had learnt while studying in the UK, binary and  statistics. Since these ideas were been 'put' into the 'waste' basket, it symbolized me forgetting these concepts as they don't help me and I don't need them anymore. 

Reflecting on your slap: 

Overall, my slab project did not turn out the way I wanted it to, however it did help me broaden my understandings of art and thus increase my already immense amount of respect I have for potters and people who work with clay. The reason this project made me realize the true value of determination paired with a creative mindset is because I could not sculpt a slab that not only looked good, but also meant something on a deeper level for either the artist, myself in this case, or for other audience members. This made the overall project very different than any other artistic project I have ever worked on in my life, as normally with drawing, one can derive meaning and paint meaning by simply remembering an image or redrawing an image that has been photographed or drawn before. However, with the slab project, one is not simply copying or developing a two dimensional piece that supposedly has meaning, instead one has to create a three dimensional object with meaning on all surfaces of the project, Since I was creating a box, I needed to have creativity on each wall of my box, as well as having the bottom shaped to resemble the most meaningful part of the box, as boxes normally serve the purpose to keep the most valuable or important things on the inside as to add a bit of mystery to the whole idea. While I tried to add meaning to each wall of my project as well as the bottom, my project did seem a bit unfinished, however I shall always remember it for it taught me a valuable lesson about ceramics; creativity needs to be represented on any side a viewer would look at it from, no matter if it be the walls or the bottom or the legs of a ceramic sculptor, which only a select few can manage to achieve.  

The Product:  



As you can, the product did seem a bit unfinished or rushed, however the project did seem to turn into the sort of image I had in mind when I was contemplating what style my project would take on. Overall I stuck with the main idea; 1's and 0's at the bottom to represent binary, a concept that I learned but have never used, and some walls stating, "waste", to represent how I feel about the whole concept of binary.

 

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