Showing posts with label installation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label installation. Show all posts

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Dead Media 4

I was asked to create a new site specific installation at the Science Museum of Virginia here in Richmond, Virginia as part of the RVA MakerFest. The local creative reuse organization Stuff Redux helped me collect the hundreds of CDs & DVDs I needed to create this anamorphic piece.








See my previous Dead Media installations HERE, HERE and HERE.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

[BONUS] 434. Dead Media 3

I was recently invited to go to Austin Peay University for a short residency where I created a new anamorphic installation in my Dead Media series. In this case I worked with old vinyl records. Around 100 were used to create this site specific piece...








See my previous Dead Media installations HERE and HERE.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

[BONUS] 429. Dead Media 2



I was invited by the kind folks at Alchemy NFK to participate in their Darkmatters pop-up one-night exhibition in Norfolk, Virginia on Friday, January 30, 2015.

I worked with a literal truckload of thrift store books (456 to be exact) to create this temporary anamorphic installation. After the show is over the piece will be dismantled and the books will be donated to CHKD Thrift Store which benefits the Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters.

The piece only looks complete from a single point in the room. The video and images below give a sense of how distorted it looks from any other viewpoint.

See my first Dead Media installation (made with video cassettes) HERE.









Monday, February 11, 2013

[BONUS] 409. Recycle or Die

I was recently asked to visit the University of Wyoming in Laramie, to give a talk about my work and as part of my visit I agreed to create a new skull installation with the students of the graphic design department...


I was given access to the large lobby of the new Department of Art building and it was decided that I would work with a material that was plentiful in the building: paper. Specifically paper that had been collected for recycling purposes (including the posters announcing my talk previous in the week).



The piece was created anamorphically (in the spirit of Hans Holbein's The Ambassadors) so that it only looks correct from one spot in the room (in this case on the landing of the staircase between the lobby and 2nd floor). It measures 19'-3" x 7'-4" (5.8 x 2.2 meters).








The piece is a temporary installation that will of course be recycled after it is dismantled. Thanks to all of the students who skipped class to help me out and especially to my host Jenny Venn for suggesting it!




Monday, January 28, 2013

[BONUS] 408. Skeleton Damask

I was recently offered a chance to create a temporary mural installation in the Loo Gallery at the wonderful Lamplighter Roasting Company here in Richmond, Virginia.


The Loo Gallery is actually their bathroom and each installation is painted over when the next artist creates their piece!


I decided to create a new wallpaper damask style pattern using only the bones of the human skeleton. I had previously created a smaller wallpaper pattern as part of my original Skull-A-Day project, but I had never done something so complex.


Since the end result was so large and complicated it required two 18" x 24" stencils to create one complete section of the pattern.


I had my friends at BIG SECRET laser cut two sets of the stencils out of thick, flexible mylar and I worked with them in rotation, since they would quickly start dripping from the layers and layers of metallic spray paint I was putting on them.


The installation took three days – or rather nights, since I was coming in after hours to give the toxic fumes a chance to air our before customers would arrive in the morning – to complete. Of course I wore a Bane-style ventilation mask the entire time so that I wasn't breathing in the fumes either...



And who knows, maybe this will get turned into actual wallpaper one day, like my Ornamental Skull wallpaper at Designer Wall Coverings & Fabrics.

In the meantime you can download a PDF to make your own stencil HERE. You'll need to make two copies of it and flip and reverse one to get the full repeat. It's available under a Creative Commons license, so use it for any personal project you like, just don't sell the stencil or the results for profit. And of course if you do use, please share a picture of the result!



Wednesday, January 2, 2013

[BONUS] Dead Media: Time-Lapse

The folks at the TCC Visual Arts Center created this fun time-lapse video of my recent Dead Media piece being installed in their gallery!


Here's what the finished project looked like:


See additional pictures and find out more about the project HERE.

Monday, September 10, 2012

403. Dead Media

I was commissioned by TCC Visual Arts Center to create this new installation called "Dead Media"...


It's made from 497 VHS videotapes, which were kindly donated by several friends (thanks again Mimi, Robin, Quillan, and Stephanie), the staff/students of Tidewater Community College, and also culled from my personal collection.


The overall size is 20'-8" x 8'-11" (6.29 x 2.71 meters)






In the spirit of the famous painting The Ambassadors by Hans Holbein the Younger, the skull was created to only look correct from one point and is actually quite distorted in real life.


Hidden amidst the whole and broken tapes are several Easter eggs, including this tape from my personal collection...


The piece will be on display from September 14 through November 1st at the TCC Visual Arts Center in Portsmouth, VA, and if you're in the area, you're invited to come to the opening reception this Friday starting at 7pm. Details can be found HERE.


Students at the school have been encouraged to take the tapes when the piece is dismantled and create their own skull art.

Monday, March 7, 2011

United Skull of America II - X Gallery, Richmond, VA

I was invited to create an installation for Main Art's outdoor X Gallery here in Richmond, VA for the months of March and April.



This 9'x 9'(274 x 274cm) piece, based on my United Skull of America design, is made of paper that has been hand cut, glued directly to the wall, and sealed with a waterbased varnish.




If you're in the area I hope you'll come by and see it in person. Since it's outdoors, it's on display 24 hours a day!



And hey, if you want a United Skull of America of your very own, check out the T-shirt & poster that are available in the Skull-A-Day store. As well as the 9' x 9' laser cut wood version that is available from Street Anatomy!


Friday, February 25, 2011

X Gallery Skull, Richmond, VA, March 4 - April 22

A new version of my United Skull of America II will be on display at Main Art's outdoor X Gallery  March 4th – April 22.


If you're in the Richmond, VA area I hope you'll swing by the reception from 7-9pm on March 4th.