User:LV/PRACTICE RESEARCH

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CARVING EXAMPLES

CarvingG.jpg CarvingG2.jpg Caroline Slotte.jpeg Caroline Slotte Jackalopedesign.jpg Jackalopedesign Spoon.jpeg Spoon2.jpeg Carving.jpeg Carving2.jpeg Carving3.jpeg Carving4.jpeg Carving5.jpeg Carving6.jpeg Carving7.jpeg Salavat Fidai .png Salavat Fidai
Marcus deSieno.jpg Marcus deSieno Erosie.jpeg Alvin Lucier.jpg Alvin Lucier

Eric Standley.jpg Eric Standley

Carvingmonopoly.JPG Carvingmetal.PNG



RAINBOWS

Larrybell.jpg Larrybell2.jpg

Also inspired by Larry Bell (one of my favorite artist at the time), I started a research about creating rainbows on metals.
Looks like this is also a thing that i'm highly interested in because i can't stop thinking about it, and i need to figure this out.
https://youtu.be/xBPFP2IkIYM

Most metals can be colored with heat oxidation, so i though hmm that is easy.
To the gas torch we go! I brought a random bunch of metal/steel objects and started heating them up.
Seems this oxidation is not so easy to steer.
Besides that i got some awesome colors, but the problem is that the colors apear when you take the gas torch away from the metal.
When the colors start to appear you can't stop them anymore.
And the bigger problem is that you can swipe the colors of with your finger, so now i have to varnish them.
And the idea was to take this ordinary objects and make them more beautiful and than still be able to use them.
Heatoxidation.jpg


A metal that can't be colored with heat is titanium, this needs an electrolytic anodizing process.
You can color the upper layer of titanium by putting the metal in a mixture of water and a sodium and connecting it with electricity.
The color you get depends on the amount of voltage.
At the moment i am waiting for my 9v battery's and for the shops to open so i can get some scrap-titanium.
Regenboog2.png Regenboog3.jpg Regenboog5.png Regenboog6.jpg Regenboog7.jpg


titanium: batterijen, water, sodiumhydroxide/soda/zuiversingszout/cola https://youtu.be/3PO0LpdoGvo
zilver: extra nodig zwavel: https://youtu.be/VrA7Jyw1uOs
http://www.hinmeijer.nl/product/118887/zwavel_99_.aspx
http://www.hinmeijer.nl/product/66825/natriumhydroxide_.aspx
http://www.kh-metals.nl/producten/speciale-metalen/titanium
http://www.ijzerhandelvandenberg.com/Bruikbaar-IJzer/


Yesterday i tried to do this with one 9v battery and some old crocodile clams (because i was too impatient) on a doorkey (don't even know if this is titanium for sure), but this failed.
The old clams got a bit cleaner though.
Regenboog8.jpg

There is also an interesting technique you can use to create rainbow/oil colors on black paper, only using warm water and transparant nailpolish.
The moment you drop the nailpolish in the water it creates a colorful surface on the water that you can apply to black paper, or anything else that will stick.
Nailpolish.jpg Nailpolish2.jpg


It is very hard to find titanium, but I contacted a few metal trade company's and luckily there was one that had some scrap titanium for me.
An interesting experience, going to a place like that, where all sorts of metal are stored in big piled up containers. The guy had to climb all the way up for me.
Metaalhandel.jpg
Well my battery's finally came in and I did everything just like the internet says, but it didn't work.
Nothing happend to the parts in the water, then I remembered you could also use a sponge to paint with, and that worked!
I'm so stoked, the colors are amazing, the colors just change in time when you make contact.
It is a pitty that it only works on one of my titanium plates, I guess the other ones aren't pure titanium. I also found out that you can use niobium for this proces.
Anodizing.jpg Anodizing2.jpg

HISTORICAL EXAMPLE

For the historical example I chose woodcarving, because this is something I tried at a young age and I wanted to see how it would go now.
I found these beautiful woodcarvings on Tumblr and was instantly hooked, the simplicity and the smoothness oboy.
Here is some research I did:

Historisch research.jpeg
Historisch research2.jpeg
Historisch research4.jpeg
Historisch research3.jpeg

Here are the carvings I experimented with:
Historical carving.jpg Historical carving2.jpg Historical carving 3.jpg

Historical carving4.jpg


Got some tools from my mother and bought a hammer and clamps.
This was not as easy as I though it would be.
After a whole day carving my body was bruised and pained.
But the thing was I kept on going, although it did not go according to what I had in mind.
I am an impatient person and want things to be finished asap so this took to long in my eyes.
It was addictive.
MUST MAKE THIS WORK.
It was frustrating.
I am a perfectionist.
It gives satisfaction to get a little bit further every carve.
It was a thinkfree zone.
I got obsessed, woodcarving is everywhere around us and now I notice everything.

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE

Perspex for me is a wonderful material, it comes in different colors and is very clean.
Most of all i like the transparant perspex.
Whenever i use perspex it needs to be dustfree and unscratched, a smooth surface.
Going against that wish i wanted to see what happend when i scratched it.
At first is was very hard to assault my perspex but later i got the hang of it.
For techniques i used: scratching, scrubbing with sandpaper, carving with different sizes, laser engraving (digital) and burning with a lighter.
By assaulting my perspex an interesting structure emerged, most of all i like the one that is carved with the big carver.
By doing this i take the ordinary material to a next level.
This was my first draft:

Comparative.jpg Comparative2.jpg

The small surfaces of structure looked too frumpy for me, so according to my own instinct i increased the surface of some.
And also, the assembled cube will take away the action of feeling the structure, because the structures are in the inside. MUWHAHA.
FOTO UITEINDELIJKE CUBE.

NEW SKILL


Since woodcarving by hand is such a pain in the ass I decided to work with the wood turning table.
This gives me the joy of woodcarving but doesn't wear my body out. Things are slightly different now:

It is addictive.
I AM MAKING THIS WORK.
It is slightly frustrating sometimes.
I am a perfectionist, I can use that in my power to create the fluent lines.
But also can put it aside when a chunk of wood breaks of, or if I carve to much.
It gives ALOT satisfaction, it makes me feel proud of what I've made.
Imadedis.jpg
It is a thinkfree zone, I can let myself let lost with the wood and let it lead me to a new form.
I get in a focus-zone.
I still am obsessed, woodcarving is everywhere around me and now I notice everything.
There is so much beauty in the wood and the prints in it.


I was to late for an open aanbod, but luckily the teacher was so sweet to give us a brief instruction.
Beforehand we had to read the instructions:
Houtdraaibank1.JPG Houtdraaibank2.JPG Houtdraaibank3.jpeg Houtdraaibank4.jpg Houtdraaibank5.JPG
1. Get a piece of wood (fine wood, dried wood, or fresh wood for extreme thin carving)
2. Cut it in a square form, if the diameter is under 45mm you don't have to make a pin.
Houtdraaibank7.jpg 3. If your diameter is above, make a pin.
4. If your diameter is above, flatten the corners.
Houtdraaibank8.jpg 5. On the other side, mark down a centerpoint and stick something(priem) in it.
6. Put your wood in the machine and tighten carefully.
Houtdraaibank9.jpg 7. Start with the big round carving thing to make the wood fully round.
8. Continue with the smaller carvers for details.
9. When satisfied with form, start polishing, start with 120 or so, and around 600 put some oil on your wood and continue till 1200 or so.
Houtdraaibank11.jpg
10. oyeah: when you want to hollow something, don't turn your wood to thin. what you see down here is 'officially' wrong.
12. Cut of the rest wood.
13. TADAAA.

Houtdraaibank12.jpg Houtdraaibank13.jpg Houtdraaibank14.jpg
Houtdraaibank15.jpg

PUSHED TO THE LIMIT

nog te doen: hout kapotdraaien.

Inspired by my own comparative cube and the fascinating prints that emerged there i started searching for interesting and ordinary objects for me to assault.
Walking through Scrap i found a box of CD's and got reminded of the beautiful rainbows on there.
I decided to experiment with the same technique i used on the cube on this CD, and the outcome is amazing.
You can still see the rainbow in a certain light-angle and the places where I slipped show a interesting second layer of the CD.
The parts where i slipped or broken of a piece of CD can be seen as a push for the limit, but they don't necessarily bring the object down.

Regenboog9.jpg


SHARED EXAMPLE

Unfortunately i missed the first lesson of the workshop due to my bruised foot. So when i came in the second lesson people were already working on something.
Something that caught my eye was what Kars was working on, cutting styrofoam.
He used a tool that cut trough styrofoam with the use of electricity that created a filament.
When using that tool you got a very smooth and mesmerizing surface, right in my alley because is was busy with creating beauty with ordinary materials.
Kars was creating a tool that could cut bigger surfaces that was almost finished, from there i joined him.
We went to the interaction station to find a way to make it mobile, but all the chargers we could find didn't give enough power.
The best way was for us to plug the tool in the labpowersupply, and use a volt from 5 to max 7.
For me it was an interesting switch in the direction of electricity, something i have never done before.
We found out that getting the supplies for your project takes most of the time haha.
We started experimenting with our styrofoam to create sculptures that show the beauty of the tool.
First we worked with our intution and tried out different motions in cutting, after that we tried to work with premade forms but that didn't give us the please of working by hand.
Our most interesting piece is the one where we let the tool create its own forms by hanging it in the material.
For our next step we don't want to mechanize our process but point out the beauty of the structure and form with lighting.

Shared.jpg Shared2.jpg Shared3.jpg
Shared4.jpg Our next step turned out to be as great as I hoped it would.
With 2 lamps, an infrared and some transparant colorsheets, our sculptures create a whole new image, almost surreal.
Shared5.jpg Shared6.jpg Shared7.jpg Shared8.jpg Shared9.jpg Shared10.jpg Shared11.jpg Shared12.jpg Shared13.jpg

STATEMENT

Imadedis.jpg

What i've been working on and what materials and techniques i've been using can be read above.
Somewhere in this quarter i decided to stop with most of the conceptual thinking in my practice.
In the quarter before I did a lot of thinking and i am totally fed up with that for the moment.
I just want to create beautiful things for now.
I also took the choice to spend less time on the computer and more time in the stations.
This course fits perfectly with my practice ideals.
In my practice I gain the best work and the most pleasure by experimenting, I like to let myself get surprised by the outcome and then work further on that.
For my competention assessment I composed these sentences about my practice essence: I want to be obstructive in this culture and communicate my believing’s.
I want to make people conscious of our own imagining and how we are being manipulated in that.
These sentences are still actual for my practice but in this course I focused on a more specific theme.
My main motive for this course was to create and experiment with materials, expanding my knowledge in this.
By doing this I found out that what I tend to do and like the most is creating beauty in something ordinary.
To create more than that already exists, to break with the conventions of our expectations.
Within this practice I actually found a technique that I enjoy a lot, turntable woodcarving! Since woodcarving by hand is such a pain in the ass I decided to work with the wood turning table.
This gives me the joy of woodcarving but doesn't wear my body out. These are the feelings i get when in action:
It is addictive.
I AM MAKING THIS WORK.
It is slightly frustrating sometimes.
I am a perfectionist, I can use that in my power to create the fluent lines.
But also can put it aside when a chunk of wood breaks of, or if I carve to much.
It gives ALOT satisfaction, it makes me feel proud of what I've made.
It is a thinkfree zone, I can let myself let lost with the wood and let it lead me to a new form.
I get in a focus-zone.
I am obsessed, woodcarving is everywhere around me and now I notice everything.
There is so much beauty in the wood and the prints in it.