Sunday, 19 June 2011

'A Wondering Life'










Pencil on tracing paper and sewn together with thread. These are around 42 days of journeys ive been on, in a day in Bath (each sheet = 1 day). Layered up to reveal over time when ive been. Hung by window so that light shines through them, highlighting the routes taken.

get lost in memory






Monoprints. Journey from memory. Positive and negative.

no particular place to go




Streets cut out from a Google map of Bath, arranged in location and scanned in to be altered in photoshop. Printed on three sheets of acetate and layered up to create confusion of whereabouts. Later used to create a screen print.

Saturday, 18 June 2011

We made bunting for our exhibition whilst sat on my trampoline :)

Bunting: we had screen printed our poster image on to plain squares and had striped squares INBETWEEN - tied with brown garden string.






Tuesday, 14 June 2011

BETWEEN THE LINES EXHIBITION BLOG

Here is the blog from the exhibition that i did in April called Between the Lines at Walcot Chapel in Bath.
http://betweenlines2011.blogspot.com/
It shows the making of the exhibition and fundraising as well as the curating and private view night :)

Jeff Woodbury

I stumbled across the artist Jeff Woodbury whilst searching the hand drawn map accociation website. I loved his dissected maps work and the description for it is the following:

'I have always had maps around. I grew up in a military family and my father, among other things, made maps. Even after I left home I traveled, and maps offer both plans and dreams. The concept of the map is one of humanity’s earliest and greatest inventions - and one of our densest ways of storing and managing information.

I began dissecting maps in 1998. Tracing routes with a knife is similar to driving down a highway - most of what you’re left with is the road itself and a narrow band of land on either side. By cutting away everything but the roads, a map ceases to be a 2-dimensional representation of reality and becomes an actual 3-dimensional thing.

Maps are generally cheap, and their value is predicated on their usefulness. When they become outdated we throw them away. By dissecting them, their use-value is destroyed by the loss of their function. But the use-value is replaced with aesthetic value, and with it a commensurate extension of the object’s lifespan.

Hung floating in front of a wall, wafting in the breeze, they’re reminiscent of clothes hung out to dry. Clothes that are too old and torn to be worn, but too cherished and full of memories to discard.'



                            
sleep/expired state
  1999 
 Two dissected maps
    folded and tangled


Dissected Map (folded)
 

His website is: http://www.jeffwoodbury.com/index.html if you want to look at more work, and there are many beautiful works at: http://www.handmaps.org/index.php.