Tuesday, 8 December 2009


LIGHT
The light in this piece seems to be coming from above and the way in which the pieces of meat are hanging in the background makes it look like they are a like angel wings and due to where the light is coming from makes the piece look quite heavenly, which is ironic considering what the piece is of and the main colours that are used.
I think that this piece links well to my project in terms of light because light comes in, in all directions on some of my drawings which give the pieces more depth.

Tuesday, 1 December 2009

SHAPE
A shape always has length as well as width. This is shown as an limited area that is defined by some of the others elements. When lines form together, they form shapes. Shapes can be of any size or of literally any shape.
The artist that created this piece is called Erwin Wurm and he looks a lot at people fitting into small spaces and trying to fill them out.
This piece is very good at showing shape in an unusual way. This piece shows shape that has been constructed by people taking up poses that fill up spaces. Shape is brought into this because the people have had to take the shape of others around them in order to occupy the space.
This particular artist always looks and constructs things like this and occupies many different places and therefore the people that take part in these things are always made to either squeeze into very small spaces or go very high and occupy big walls.
SPACE
Space is the creation of visual view; this gives the illusion of depth. Space can also be the way an artist uses the area within the space given. The way any artist uses the combination of filling and not filling up space can have a great effect on the viewer. The right use of space can go a long way in creating a bigger impact. Space with depth can be created with the help of shading.
The space that has been used in this piece has been used quite well in my opinion. This is because the figure manages to venture of the canvas and gives the viewer nothing else to look at therefore having a bigger impact as they are forced to look at that. The piece disappears off three sides on the canvas and just touches the top of the piece. This must have been thought about when Saville was painting it as she wanted the focal point to be the main belly as this is part that relates most to the story that the painting is about.
TEXTURE
The texture is the quality of a surface or the way any piece of work is represented. Lines and shading can be used to create different textures as well. For example, if you were trying to portray certain fabrics in a piece of work, the movement of the lines and shading in the right places would need to be accurate in order to mske it look three dimensional.
These little models have been hand made and therefore consists of many textures. Sculptures have more textures than paintings anyway and in this piece there are many different levels to the piece therefore indicating that there will be more textures.
Nothing in the piece is likely to be smooth, if it was hand-made however this is what makes the piece a bit more interesting. I think it being hand made as well also adds to the impact that its has on the viewer because all the little people are really thin and disturbing.
I don't think that this texture is easy for me to incorporate into my work as not a lot of the pieces involve a lot of textures in them, but I think that could manage to put it in somewhere.
LINE
This is a mark that is made on a surface. Lines are the first element of art and are continuous marks that are made on any surface with a moving point. Lines can also be used to express different emotions, harsh lines to express anger and softer lines to express calm and tranquil feelings. Diagonal lines are used to create feelings of movement.
This piece was created by Francis Bacon and I think that the definition of line supports this painting very well. The movement of the line could show Bacon's emotions at the time as the lines and colour are harsh and strong maybe implying hid mood.
The line in this piece is quite obvious, they seem to be moving up towards the top of the painting.
As the face has been disfigured and has been merged out of its normal stature, it seems like the lines have been drawn upwards to perhaps give the idea that the face is being pulled apart. The lines of the cloak that the man is wearing also seem to flow follwing the shape of the arm and flow in both north and south directions.
I think this piece links well to my second drawing as there are many lines in my drawing however as a contrast the lines in my drawing are more flowing and curved but both have direction.
COLOUR
Colour always has three characteristics, hue, value and intensity. Hue meaning shades, value meaning the lightness or the darkness and intensity meaning brightness or dullness of the work of art.
The colours that are used in this piece are quite vibrant and bold. This compliments the work of Dali as he was known for his unique and weird ideas. There is a good contrast of colour between the black of his hair and the blue of the sky and I think that putting these two colours together works well. The colours that are used are all very realistic as well, and are all very tonal and flesh like therefore giving more realistic qualities to the piece, the face especially. The hues in this piece are very clear especially on the face. This also helps when looking at how realistic the piece is.
I think that this piece loosely relates to my work because of the colour that are used and I am also trying to create different hues in my painting as well by building up layers.
Gallery Review
The theme of the show was Medical History and Surgical Research, which has attended by numerous medical students and has also had conferences held within it.
The main pieces of work that were featured in this exhibition were that of Hunter, who was a leading physician in his time.
I went to this particular exhibition because I felt that it linked well with what I'm doing in my project, but overall there was unique content and a very good comparison to make between this museum and The Wellcome Collection.
There were many exhibitions, but they were all of mainly the same thing, internal body parts that had been preserves in formaldehyde. There were also bones of the animal heads that had been well preserved as well as they had very few dents or cracks in them.
When I first walked in I was quite amazed at how well kept everything had been and I found it all quite fascinating and really interesting as this isn't necessarily something you see everyday.
Overall there were some quite disgusting artifacts but the wax models of the heads were really good.
A lasting impression that it has made was that even though I have no medical knowledge it opened my eyes to the important part of human life.

Wednesday, 11 November 2009

The Chapman Brother's 20
by The Chapman Brothers

Looking at approaches to deformity, disability and obesity in Art


This essay will look at various artists and their approaches to deformity, disability and obesity in their own pieces of work. It will cover the meaning behind each piece, how the artist felt when they had created it and what they were thinking as they were creating it. This essay will be critical to several artists and their interpretation of the three disorders, whether it be through paintings, sculpture or another form, this essay will explore the different mediums and the different ways that they express their ideas. Artists that will be looked at in this essay are Mieke Teirlinck who painted ‘Francis’, Jenny Saville who painted ‘Host’ and John Issacs who sculpted ‘I Can’t Help the Way I Feel’. A few other artists will also be mentioned, due to the fact that their work also links in very well when discussing this topic. I have decided to look at the pieces named because I feel that they give a good demonstration of the disorders and can really help me focus on the point that I wish to make, which is the variety of ways that disorders can be portrayed in Art.

‘Francis’ by Mieke Teirlinck was painted as part of the BP Portrait Award in the National Gallery of 2009. After training as a teacher she studied part time at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bruges. Her work has been exhibited throughout Belgium has been shown in both solo and group and was also commissioned to paint twenty-one portraits in 2002 for the organisers of the Bruges Cultural Capital of Europe. This painting is actually of Francis, a person who lives in a residential home for people with disability in Bruges. This was just one of a series of portraits of the people who live the residence and they had to sit for fifteen hours while she painted them. She said,

“I didn’t know any of them and connecting with them became the most interesting experience”[1].

Teirlinck has also painted many other people from the same place that look a bit like Francis and could possibly have the same condition as him, or another disorder.

The fact that the piece is created on such a small surface makes the piece a bit more interesting as it makes it more intense to the eye. It is very hard for the viewer to focus on anything else except the model due to the lack of space around him he cannot avoided and therefore seeing that something is wrong with him cannot be avoided either, which makes the viewer becoming a little more aware of his abnormality.
The colours that are used in the image are all very tonal and give a good sense if the fact that the piece is meant to be of a human due to all the different hues and textures that are created from the paint, and give the viewer a real sense that Teirlinck was painting from real life. It could make the viewer feel more connected with the piece and maybe more curious about it, wanting to know the history of it. The piece, in comparison to the rest of the exhibition it was in, was both similar and different. It was similar due the subject of the piece, as the exhibition was of celebrities and ordinary people that had been painted by a variety of different artists. The main difference, I noticed, was the quality of the piece in comparison to some of the others. Some of the pieces for example, ‘Maggie’ by Sue Rubira, was painted so clearly that they can easily be mistaken for a photograph instead of a painting. The quality of ‘Francis’ shows that many layers that have been put onto the canvas in order to build up the tone and the fleshy colours, like those which have been mentioned earlier. ‘Host’ by Jenny Saville was based on a novel by Marie Darrieussecq called Pig Tales. This is the story of a woman who finds herself slowing turning into a pig and Saville manages to paint the affective belly of the lady-swine, ripe and swollen for suckling. This was painted as oil on canvas, was 305 x 457cm and was created in 2000. This piece, similar to Teirlinck's work, also uses very tonal colours that also give of a very fleshy, skin-type look. When looking at the piece closely we can also pick out a few things that could be seen as abnormalities. Looking at the woman’s arms there are a few red blotches which could be interpreted as bruises or where some skin has been taken out her arm and blood has started to escape. A few other marks that appear across the body could also look like bruises, where she could have been attacked, or assaulted. This piece could have quite a big impact on the viewer as it is quite disturbing. Some of the mark making on the piece makes the skin looked like it is rolled over other pieces of skin and therefore showing that weight could be an issue to this ‘model’. When also looking closely at the image the viewer can see just how influenced this piece was by the book as the woman not only has the udders of the pig but also has no hands, but instead hooves.

“If Saville's feminism lies in a clear-eyed and unromantic view of the average female form - undistorted by sexual desire or notions of idealised femininity - it's hard to know whether her subjects (some clearly self-portraits) revel in their obesity, or are disgusted by it. They just exist, like standing stones of solid human flesh, or in the case of Host (2000), solid, dead, pig flesh.”[2]

I also think that this piece also gives a big impact with its composition, because it comes of the page. The viewers do not see the head and the ‘hands’ and ‘feet’ are also cut off from the painting. Other than the udders on the woman, the only thing that the viewer can see is the hoof on one of the arms. I think instantly from first viewings of this painting viewers would be able to clearly see that Saville was trying to portray some form of animal, but only when doing some research do we find out the motives of the painting. With her style of painting being likened to that of Lucien Freud, Saville could follow in the words of him and

"paint people not because of what they are like, not exactly in spite of what they are like, but how they happen to be." [3]

John Issacs ‘I can’t help the way I feel’ is in exhibition in the Wellcome Trust gallery and was created in 2003. It is made up of mixed media such as wax, resin, polystyrene and steel. It is big as well as it measures 86.5 x 59 x 70 inches which is the equivalent to 220 x 150 x 170cm. This piece of work has had many questions asked about what it actually is, whether it’s representing obesity on a extreme level or whether it’s a tumour that has completely overtaken the body. In a BBC article it is revealed that the work is in fact a “body of fat that is so gross it appears to have enveloped its own head”[4]. To make this piece look even more realistic and disgusting it appears to have also been covered in sores in the entire crack underneath various layers of skin. Dr Ken Arnold said the image illustrated how obesity had become a medical issue, and was designed to show how an obese person might perceive themselves. These pieces of work relate very well to my topic because they all look at problems with people’s appearance and their health. The sculpture in particular can be interpreted into two different things. Obesity and tumors. Both of these topics have been in the media in some form or another, obesity in children is on the rise and tumors internally, for example cancer tumors can expand and spread across the body.

The biggest impact that this sculpture would have on viewers would be the height of the piece as it looks very life like and is human. Although it is covered in gloss, the skin tones, the growths and sores that are on the body all seem very realistic due to the colours that are used on it. The most disturbing part of this piece is the feet due to the colour. The redness/purple in them shows that something is wrong with them and potentially there could be a sense of cut off blood circulation. The fact that the growths are not perfectly rounded also demonstrates the realistic nature of the piece as the creases in the skin are all highlighted. This piece is also a bit worrying, due to the size of the legs, in my opinion. The size of the body compared to the size of the legs is disturbing as the legs are quite small. To imagine this as a real person is alarming because it would be fairly obvious that ‘person’ would not have a very long life.

A couple of artists that look at things completely differently, when it comes to deformity are the Chapman Brothers who deface objects, for example English money, to order to create another piece of art. One of their works that was produced in 2003 was a series of works named ‘Insult to Injury’, in which they altered a set of etchings by adding funny faces, much like the twenty pound note below. The etchings that they defaced, they had bought, and these were created by Goya. When the media had found out about what the brothers had done there were mixed reviews as these etchings were quite personal to Goya and showed a darker side to him.
‘The Chapman 20’

“The Chapman brothers are getting mixed reviews for defacing a complete, rare set of Goya prints. The 80 etchings in Goya's apocalyptic "Disaster of War" were purchased two years ago by the artists. While the artists' work has long paid homage to the darker side of the Spanish master, their latest venture, in which they drew demonic clown and puppy heads on each of Goya's victims, is too far for some.
Said critic Robert Hughes, "Goya will obviously survive these twerps, whose names will be forgotten a few years from now ... Maybe it's time they put Mickey Mouse heads on the Sistine Chapel”[5]

The reason that the brothers work links in well to the subject of deformity is because they come up with different and inventive approaches to their art. They take simple pieces of artwork and make them into their own. By their actions this could potentially prove the point that artists can interpret different works in their own way. They could have viewed Goya’s work as quite depressing and shocking so they have decided to ‘reconstruct’ the piece and make it something that viewers would find more visually interesting and contemporary.

Different artists can interpret different pieces of work in many different ways. They manage to create a piece of artwork from any form of media text whether it is from a book or another person’s work. Artists can either improve a piece of work or in other people’s eyes make it worse, however when looking at the topic of deformity, disability and obesity I do not think there is any right or wrong way to interpret or work into another person’s work, as I think when looking at these disorders anything extra would just enhance the piece.

Bibliography
http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/jenny_saville.htm

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/disability

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/deformity

http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/obseity

http://users.skynet.be/geertlejeune/painting/portr20.htm

http://pinkiguana.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/chapman-brothers-note.jpg

[1] http://www.npg.org.uk/bp-portrait-award-20091/the-exhibition/exhibitors4/bp-exhibitor-53.php

[2] http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2003/apr/20/thesaatchigallery.art10. This quote from the Guardian website could potentially be saying that women can either be proud of what they look like or they could be disgusted by it. This could relate to the painting as the woman from the book could be proud that she is turning into an animal, or she could horrified by it.
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucian_Freud. This quote could relate to Saville’s piece ‘Host’ because its saying that she could paint people, not just because their people but because of who they are on the inside, and she chose to look at a woman turning into a pig because there is potentially something unique and interesting about her.

[4] http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/pop_ups/07/health_the_wellcome_collection/html/12.stm

[5] http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0HMU/is_5_30/ai_101940428/

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Looking at approaches to deformity, disability and obesity in Art

This essay will look at various artists and their approaches to deformity, disability and obesity in their own pieces of work. It will cover the meaning behind each piece, how the artist felt when they had created it and what they were thinking as they were creating it. This essay will be critical to several artists and their interpretation of the three disorders, whether it be through paintings, sculpture or another form, this essay will explore the different mediums and the different ways that they express their ideas. Artists that will be looked at in this essay are Mieke Teirlinck who painted ‘Francis’, Jenny Saville who painted ‘Host’ and John Issacs who sculpted ‘I Can’t Help the Way I Feel’. A few other artists will also be mentioned, due to the fact that their work also links in very well when discussing this topic. I have decided to look at the pieces named because I feel that they give a good demonstration of the disorders and can really help me focus on the point that I wish to make, which is the variety of ways that disorders can be portrayed in Art.

'Francis’ by Mieke Teirlinck was painted as part of the BP Portrait Award in the National Gallery of 2009. After training as a teacher she studied part time at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bruges. Her work has been exhibited throughout Belgium has been shown in both solo and group and was also commissioned to paint twenty-one portraits in 2002 for the organisers of the Bruges Cultural Capital of Europe. This painting is actually of Francis, a person who lives in a residential home for people with disability in Bruges. This was just one of a series of portraits of the people who live the residence and they had to sit for fifteen hours while she painted them. She said,

“I didn’t know any of them and connecting with them became the most interesting experience” .

Teirlinck has also painted many other people from the same place that look a bit like Francis and could possibly have the same condition as him, or another disorder.

The fact that the piece is created on such a small surface makes the piece a bit more interesting as it makes it more intense to the eye. It is very hard for the viewer to focus on anything else except the model due to the lack of space around him he cannot avoided and therefore seeing that something is wrong with him cannot be avoided either, which makes the viewer becoming a little more aware of his abnormality.

The colours that are used in the image are all very tonal and give a good sense if the fact that the piece is meant to be of a human due to all the different hues and textures that are created from the paint, and give the viewer a real sense that Teirlinck was painting from real life. It could make the viewer feel more connected with the piece and maybe more curious about it, wanting to know the history of it. The piece, in comparison to the rest of the exhibition it was in, was both similar and different. It was similar due the subject of the piece, as the exhibition was of celebrities and ordinary people that had been painted by a variety of different artists. The main difference, I noticed, was the quality of the piece in comparison to some of the others. Some of the pieces for example, ‘Maggie’ by Sue Rubira, was painted so clearly that they can easily be mistaken for a photograph instead of a painting. The quality of ‘Francis’ shows that many layers that have been put onto the canvas in order to build up the tone and the fleshy colours, like those which have been mentioned earlier.

‘Host’ by Jenny Saville was based on a novel by Marie Darrieussecq called Pig Tales. This is the story of a woman who finds herself slowing turning into a pig and Saville manages to paint the affective belly of the lady-swine, ripe and swollen for suckling. This was painted as oil on canvas, was 305 x 457cm and was created in 2000. This piece, similar to Teirlinck's work, also uses very tonal colours that also give of a very fleshy, skin-type look. When looking at the piece closely we can also pick out a few things that could be seen as abnormalities. Looking at the woman’s arms there are a few red blotches which could be interpreted as bruises or where some skin has been taken out her arm and blood has started to escape. A few other marks that appear across the body could also look like bruises, where she could have been attacked, or assaulted. This piece could have quite a big impact on the viewer as it is quite disturbing. Some of the mark making on the piece makes the skin looked like it is rolled over other pieces of skin and therefore showing that weight could be an issue to this ‘model’. When also looking closely at the image the viewer can see just how influenced this piece was by the book as the woman not only has the udders of the pig but also has no hands, but instead hooves.

“If Saville's feminism lies in a clear-eyed and unromantic view of the average female form - undistorted by sexual desire or notions of idealised femininity - it's hard to know whether her subjects (some clearly self-portraits) revel in their obesity, or are disgusted by it. They just exist, like standing stones of solid human flesh, or in the case of Host (2000), solid, dead, pig flesh.”

I also think that this piece also gives a big impact with its composition, because it comes of the page. The viewers do not see the head and the ‘hands’ and ‘feet’ are also cut off from the painting. Other than the udders on the woman, the only thing that the viewer can see is the hoof on one of the arms. I think instantly from first viewings of this painting viewers would be able to clearly see that Saville was trying to portray some form of animal, but only when doing some research do we find out the motives of the painting.

John Issacs ‘I can’t help the way I feel’ is in exhibition in the Wellcome Trust gallery and was created in 2003. It is made up of mixed media such as wax, resin, polystyrene and steel. It is big as well as it measures 86.5 x 59 x 70 inches which is the equivalent to 220 x 150 x 170cm. This piece of work has had many questions asked about what it actually is, whether it’s representing obesity on a extreme level or whether it’s a tumour that has completely overtaken the body. In a BBC article it is revealed that the work is in fact a “body of fat that is so gross it appears to have enveloped its own head” . To make this piece look even more realistic and disgusting it appears to have also been covered in sores in the entire crack underneath various layers of skin. Dr Ken Arnold said the image illustrated how obesity had become a medical issue, and was designed to show how an obese person might perceive themselves. These pieces of work relate very well to my topic because they all look at problems with people’s appearance and their health. The sculpture in particular can be interpreted into two different things. Obesity and tumors. Both of these topics have been in the media in some form or another, obesity in children is on the rise and tumors internally, for example cancer tumors can expand and spread across the body.

The biggest impact that this sculpture would have on viewers would be the height of the piece as it looks very life like and is human. Although it is covered in gloss, the skin tones, the growths and sores that are on the body all seem very realistic due to the colours that are used on it. The most disturbing part of this piece is the feet due to the colour. The redness/purple in them shows that something is wrong with them and potentially there could be a sense of cut off blood circulation. The fact that the growths are not perfectly rounded also demonstrates the realistic nature of the piece as the creases in the skin are all highlighted. This piece is also a bit worrying, due to the size of the legs, in my opinion. The size of the body compared to the size of the legs is disturbing as the legs are quite small. To imagine this as a real person is alarming because it would be fairly obvious that ‘person’ would not have a very long life.

Tuesday, 29 September 2009

This piece of work was created by Mark Quinn and sat in Trafalgar Square for a while. Its of a pregnant Alice Lapper, who suffered from domestic violence and also had genetic disorder which meant that she had no arms and short legs.
I really like this photo for the simple reason that it reminds me of a honeycomb. I really like the way that all the string is really interwoven with each other and how all the shapes that are made through it nearly all circles.
I think that the angle that I have taken it from is quite good as well because the focus is better and clear. I do think that the picture is a bit pale because the string is white as well.
I think that the picture would be better if the background was darker as the white string would stand out more, just like in anothe rone of my images.


This is one of my favourite photographs that I took from the wall hanging, simply because of the pattern that the string makes as it goes from one side of the hole to the other. I just think that this is really interesting as some parts of the string just touch each other but some completely over lap.
I also think that because the hole and the string aren't in the centre of the picture it makes it more interesting, as your eye is first drawn to that and then moves across the picture.
I also think that the little drawing that appears on the paper makes the piece appealing as some of the lines link around the string expand it out.
Abnormality in Art
"Abnormality, in the sense of something deviating from the normal or differing from the typical is a subjectively defined behavioral characteristic, assigned to those with rare or dysfunctional conditions." (Wikipedia)

This essay will focus on abnormality in Art and will look at how this topic has been approached in different ways. This essay will look at several artists and their interpretation of abnormality, whether it be through paintings, sculpture or another form this essay will explore the different mediums and the different ways that they express their ideas of abnormailty. Artists that will be looked at in this essay are Mieke Teirlinck who painted Francis, Jenny Saville who painted Host and John Issacs who sculpted I Can't Help The Way I Feel. I have decided to look at these pieces because I feel that they give a good demonstration of abnormality and can really help me focus on the point that I wish to make, which is the different ways in Art that abnormality has been protrayed.

‘Francis’ by Mieke Teirlinck was painted as part of the BP Portrait Award in the National Gallery for 2009. After training as a teacher she studied part time at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bruges. Her work has been exhibited throughout Belgium has been shown in both solo and group and was also commissioned to paint twenty-one portraits in 2002 for the organisers of the Bruges Cultural Capital of Europe. This painting is actually of Francis, a real person who lives in a residential home for people with disability in Bruges. This was just one of a series of portraits of the people who live the residence and they had to sit for fifteen hours while she painted them. She said “I didn’t know any of them and connecting with them became the most interesting experience”. When doing some more research on the internet about this artist I managed to come across their website and saw that they had painted may people that all looked as if they had something wrong with then, maybe an abnormality in their characteristics, but something that made them stand out from other people. This piece, Francis, was painted with oil onto a piece of canvas.

The fact that the piece is created on such a small surface makes the piece a bit more interesting as it makes it more intense to the eye. It's very hard for the viewer to focus on anything else except the model due to the lack of space around him he cannot avoided and therefore seeing that something is wrong with him cannot be avoided either, which makes the viewer becoming a little more aware of his abnormality.
The colours that are used in the image are all very tonal like and give the viewer a real sense that Teirlinck was painting from real life and could make the viewer feel more connected with the piece and maybe more curious about it, wanting to know the history of it.


‘Host’ by Jenny Saville was based on a novel by Marie Darrieussecq called Pig Tales. This is the story of a woman who finds herself slowing turning into a pig and Saville manages to paint the affective belly of the lady-swine, ripe and swollen for suckling. This was painted as oil on canvas, was 305 x 457cm and was created in 2000. This piece, similar to Teirlinck's work, also uses very tonal colours that also give of a very fleshy, skin-type look.

I Can't Help The Way I Feel by John Issacs
Host by Jenny Saville

Wednesday, 23 September 2009

Francis
by Mieke Tierlinck