Thursday, October 22, 2009

W 12 = Done and Dusted

Finally done! Weeks to think about and minutes to destroy (in fact the umbrella fell down just after our presentation: so that was lucky). And loads of materials tucked neatly in one corner of the studio as a resource for future units.

It was hard to photograph as you can see below and the movie just didn't work, but at least the sound track is up in this blog separately. The elements worked together very well - the glow soyfish needed to be at the front. We had to put the fan on high to have any real tenatacle moving impact and the glow paint didn't really glow for very long or very much. We think part of the problem was that the umbrella was moved away fromt he window during the week and it wasn't that bringht in the studio as it was. Oh well. Nicole's ceiling lighting worked well. Basically all the elements made a complete environment and used almost all the senses. There were even good reflections off the black plastic walls.

I called it - in the moment of presentation - 'A Glimpse of the Ocean Sublime', which is a term that a correspondant of Freud's used to describe the feeling of a religious experience. I really like that we succeeded in re-using so much of my rubbish from the first installation to construct another completely unnatural / natural environment. People were very curious about the sound track - my sound of a garbage truck stating up but manipulated so it sounds blooby or, as someone said, 'like my husband's stomach'.











Saturday, October 17, 2009

W 11 - Nearly There!

Just one more week to go! Katie found a great solution to the glow paint issue - safety paint. This comes in larger cans from Bunnings. The Reject Shop art sections only stock tiny cans. And she's painted the white fabric of the umbrella. White - although I didn't think of this obvious fact before - is the surface that will glow the best...it was only a coincidence that the umbrella I wnted ot throw away was white! Any way, we tried it out in the enclosure and it works very well - a sort of Halloween yellow-green. Later she painted the floral canes (the ones Nicole and Katie had painted white) with a couple of coats and then we sticky-taped them around the central pole of the umbrella and left the whole thing to cure and get as much light as possible.

We also trialled hanging it - it only needed some fishing wire sewn through two of the spokes on one side (so it'll hang at an angle) and one sticky hook on the ceiling. As it's positioned to the side the back spokes are supported by the enclosure. So in W12 the umbrella can be taken into the enclosure collapsed, hung on the hook and opened up.

Although I'd bought little sticky hooks to hang the jellyfish from, we thought that given their weight, these were probably unnecessary. In the end we use sticky-tape. We used a lot of sticky tape in today's studio! So while the big jellyfish will hang on the left, the small ones are grouped on the right (and a smaller group on the left in front of the bigg jellyfish):
Having hung them we taped on the LED lights - grouping colours in what we thought was aesthetic. Next week we'll add a fan to waft the tentacles as well. It should be beautiful.

Next came the coral that had dried all around the studio. The two main issues with these forms was how best to show them off and how to light them. This involved some problem-solving on the fly. At first Katie and Nicole grouped the individual corals on the floor and leant them against the wall of the enclosure. This simply did not do justice to the work put into them - they just looked like untidy lumps. Instead we dug out the polystyrene packaging shapes I'd brought in a few weeks ago and stuck the coral over and around them and grouped them into three areas in the enclosure. Around these - to cover up the floor, exposed polystyrene and the edges of the plastic we scattered a very thin layer of shredded paper. Less was definitely more.

There were then several experiements with lighting. The plan had been to use optical fibre toys. Unfortuantely, Katie's order hasn't arrived. Fortunately, she found that the torches used as tiny theatre lights aimed at the coral (rather than placed in it), lit it to the best effect - lots of depth, shadows and structure revealed. And, this way, it doesn't take very many lights. Less is more again:


The Ceiling: Nicole did some ruminating. I could see she wasn't happy about the small tears in the plastic of the enclosure. The solution she came up with was to stick the torch base of the fibre-optic toy through a hole and aim it at the white ceiling. This produces a dabbled light effect - like a theatrical creation of the surface of the sea. With just a couple of lights we can bring the ceiling into the installation and use it to add another dimension to the effect we want. This lead to thinking about doing the same for the sea floor, but using a torch on a different colour setting. Great thinking processes!

The viewing flap idea needed revisiting. The idea had been to re-use a device with a rectangle cut out of it that Nicole found in the studio. Katie and I had found that in practice it was very clumbersome moving it around all the objects inside. So I suggested we abandon it and simply cut a flap in the plastic on the front side and have people peer in. Same effect - less bulk and damage issues. Katie held a rectangular container to the inside of the plastic. I held the edges down on the outside and Nicole cut! Teamwork.

Katie has been thinking about the soy fish mobile. Again the late order of fibre optic toys was for this mobile. However, seeing the effectiveness of the glow paint, she's decided to paint the fish white and then use the last of the paint over the top, expose the paint and hang from a coathanger. I suggested this was an object we needed to hand right at the front as it'll be small, but effective.

Finally, we tried out the seascape sound effect with my MP3 player and portable speakers and - yes - perfect.

There are a lot of elements to this work and one of the challenges - apart from getting them done has been how best to arrange and light them. Not everything has worlked first time round. That's the good bit about having multiple brains - together we can think of different ways to do things.

For me the process has exposed two things:

(1) Less is more. If I was expanding on this idea I'd use fewer elements.

Either just the soy fish mobile, but much bigger and hung in an arrangement that would make viewers go gosh-wow - I'm feeling highly influenced by Do Ho Suh's Cause and Effect - a massive chandelier of interlocking plastic people.

Or lots and lots of the small jellyfish - a room full - through which people would walk, interacting with the moving tentacles. Not unlike Warhol's Silver Pillows.

(2) How limited I am physically. It was gentle, but essentially Katie would not let me climb and assist in any of the hanging, I tire easily with all the standing in the studio, I don't bend well or far any more and I simply couldn't enter the enclosure once we'd stapled it up so entry was via a narrow slit.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

W10 - Construction continues

In a FREEZING studio this week Katie created corals and covered every available hanging space with them as seen below:

She also put some more costs of white paint on the floral canes we'll use for the central; tentacles of the big jellyfish. They are still proving resistant to having all their colour covered up, but this may not show up in the darkish enclosure? We trialed some mini LED lights (from the deepest depths of the 'useful stuff' in Mark's garage brothel) wedged up in the spokes of the umbrella to see the effect. Katie took the umbrella home to paint it with glow paint and expose it to bright light and we'll asemble in W11.
With tearing help from Katie, Megan and Polly I constructed 10 more jellyfish - there was just enough peeled foam to make the hundreds of beautiful floating tentacles needed and hung them
by the enclosure ready for installation in W11. They look like deflated southern belles; their skirts all awry: