I was looking through some photos from my visit to North Queensland earlier this year, and found the photos I took of some Australian plants and flowers. I know that the first one is a Hibiscus flower but I can't seem to find the names of the others, sadly. Since my final design is producing a floral effect, I thought these might give some inspiration.
All these flowers are so different, and each have unique patterns and textures in them, which could help with my final piece. For example, the Hibiscus at the top has a pleated texture, not too dissimilar to some of Richard Sweeney's work. They all have symmetrical characteristics too, which can be found in my final designs for my sculpture.
Wednesday, 23 February 2011
Thursday, 17 February 2011
Leaf Design Development
This is the original leaf design I produced a couple of weeks ago, consisting of only 2 main parts:
Since then I have worked on a design consisting of 3 leaf repetitions, on a smaller scale for experimentation:
This is what the form looked like when folded together and attached at the base:
I then repeated the form and attached 4 together to produce a floral effect.
This has proven rather successful, so I shall look into different scales and also add more repetitions to produce a more spherical shape.
Nodular Forms
During the past couple of workshops, I have really found the repetitive nodular techniques the most appealing. Having worked on the leaf design in the previous post, I decided it would be best to explore that further, and create more variations of it, to work towards my final piece.
Below are some photos of Richard Sweeney's work that has involved using one nodular form and repeating it to produce a larger piece.
Below are some photos of Richard Sweeney's work that has involved using one nodular form and repeating it to produce a larger piece.
I find this technique a very appealing one, as I am really interested in symmetry and pattern. I will look into my leaf design and expand on it to produce a nodular piece for development.
Thursday, 10 February 2011
Workshop #2 - A2 paper
After trying out some designs on A5 paper, we were asked to then move onto A2 size paper to see how our designs looked in a larger scale.
I found my leaf design worked the best in the larger size, and I would like to explore more variations of it, with more repetition. I like how different it looks from various angles, and depending on how I held it. I think I'll look at increasing the number of 'petals' to give more volume.
^ Flat version of sculpture below ^
I found my leaf design worked the best in the larger size, and I would like to explore more variations of it, with more repetition. I like how different it looks from various angles, and depending on how I held it. I think I'll look at increasing the number of 'petals' to give more volume.
Thursday, 3 February 2011
Shop Windows!
There are loads of shops that use paper sculpture at the moment, two of these being Monsoon and Anthropologie. I had a look at what images I could find on various Flickr accounts and websites, and here's what I found:
Monsoon Christmas display: shapes slotted together with cut out decoration
Accessorize display, 3D lettering and cut out basic shapes
Monsoon Children's display: layered shapes in various sizes for movement.
Anthropologie window display: Classic paper chain structure, repeated in various sizes and lengths to create huge impact and height.
Anthropologie window display: Honeycomb repeated pattern (very useful for this brief!) with changes in scale and colour for depth.
Anthropologie window display: Paper birds hung at graduated lengths for a sweeping effect, giving lots of movement.
These examples have given me inspiration, especially the Anthropologie displays, which show use of repeated shapes and forms, fitting with my brief perfectly. I will use some of these influences in my own designs.
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