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Showing posts from October, 2024

Meet in the Middle

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  For this assignment, Three of us were put into groups and instructed to find the spot right in the middle of the dorms we were living in. It was here that we needed to collaborate on an art piece and install it. I was paired up with Mia and Diego C., who live in the GLC and Van Kampen Hall respectively. I live in Armington D, which means we lived very close together and found our point right by the directory in the Van Kampen parking lot. Instead of doing our full piece here, we decided to turn the directory into a treasure map. Using vinyl to mark an X on the spot, we found a perfect bush in the river hiking trail. We then constructed a treasure chest out of firm cardboard, with each of us taking turns cutting pieces, attaching them, and painting them. The final result was a chest that blended in well with the environment and made for a satisfying hunt. Within this box is not a traditional treasure. Anyone who finds it has the chance to leave a treasure of their own or take one ...

Ritual and Personal Space Installation

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Stress Pile Notebook paper, pens In recent weeks, my schoolwork and social life has kept me busier than ever. Because of this, I wanted to explore how fast stress and priorities manifest each day and how they can leave you just as quickly. Stress has its time and it doesn't feel nice but it will pass and people who experience it will make it through in the end. For me, a week at school feels like "controlled chaos" and I wanted to perform an exercise that let me control it even more. I found a private space in a tunnel underneath a bridge on campus and returned here over the next five days. Every day, I wrote down each stressful thought and feeling on individual pieces of notebook paper. I then crumpled these papers up and threw them into the corner of the tunnel. Some days I would only write about three things that were making me anxious, and others I would write six or seven. The pile started small, but got bigger and bigger each day. This symbolized how it feels when s...

Measuring Histories

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  Dad’s Life Foam board, artist tape, hot glue, cereal boxes, cereal Ever since he was a child, my Dad has loved cereal. He grew up surrounded by Kellogg’s commercials on the television which has stuck with him into his adulthood. When I had the assignment to make a piece that measures time, I knew I wanted to represent the years of his life with a certain amount of his favorite cereal. It’s fitting that his favorite cereal is Life! I purchased 62 cups worth of cereal, one for each year of his life, and overfilled a big bowl with all of it. This alone conveys the time element, but I wanted to make the piece more personal by creating a “call and response” portion above the bowl that used inside jokes we share. My Dad’s favorite cereal says, “Respect the process!!!” Which is a quote from a Gillette Labs commercial my Dad and I are obsessed with. On the right, my favorite cereal Captain Crunch responds, “It’s too much!!!” Which is a quote from a Taco Bell breakfast commercial starring...