Saturday, 8 June 2013

Research

Tyrone Appollis
Born 1957, Cape Town, South Africa

Tyrone Appollis started his art career as a painter and began sculpting in wood seriously from 1990. Currently he views himself as being a sculptor, painter, print-maker, poet and street musician. He considers political and social reconciliation to be a function of art – art as cross-cultural dialogue. Appollis has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions in multi-media. These exhibitions have taken place all over South Africa as well as outside of its borders.

I chose to look at Tyrone Appollis because of the colours used in his work, with him being an African artist I found it helpful noticing that some of the colours he uses I could use for my own work to give it that vibrant feel of Africa. I also enjoy some of his black and white paintings because they have that African symbols within the painting and he has taken markings from the culture and used them in his work.


Wednesday, 15 May 2013

FMP

FMP

I took symbols from the Adinkra prints and symbols from the tribal prints for my final piece. I did a few samples before I went on to working on my metre of fabric.












Finally after sampling, I created a moodboard












And then moved on to my final piece



Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Adinkra

http://www.adinkra.org/htmls/tattoos.htm
http://www.adinkra.org/htmls/adinkra_index.htm
http://africanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/aaAdinkra.htm


Adinkra Symbology
The Origin and Meaning of Adinkra Symbols


Adinkra is a cotton cloth produced in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire which has traditional Akan symbols stamped upon it. The adinkra symbols represent popular proverbs and maxims, record historical events, express particular attitudes or behaviour related to depicted figures, or concepts uniquely related to abstract shapes. It is one of several traditional cloths produced in the region – the other well known cloths being kente and adanudo.

The Akan people (of what is now Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire) had developed significant skills in weaving by the sixteenth century, with Nsoko an important weaving centre. Adinkra, originally produced by the Gyaaman clans of the Brong region, was the exclusive right of royalty and spiritual leaders, and only used for important ceremonies such as funerals – adinkra means 'goodbye'.

Over time the Asante further developed adinkra symbology, incorporating their own philosophies, folk-tales and culture. Adinkra symbols were also used on pottery, metal work (especially abosodee), and are now incorporated into modern commercial designs (where their related meanings give added significance to the product), architecture and sculpture.




Sunday, 5 May 2013

Research

Tinus de Jongh
Born 1885, Amsterdam

Self-taught, he began his career as a decorator in the Netherlands, and then pursued painting full-time. He achieved some note when the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam purchased one of his early pictures. He arrived in South Africa in 1921, the light and landscape of South Africa soon caused him to abandon his muted palette in favour of more saturated colours. His formulaic approach to painting Cape landscapes with gabled farmhouses created such a demand that he abandoned his considered brushwork in favour of a broader palette knife technique.
 
Although Tinus de Jongh's work is completely different to what I did with my work, his really captures the eye and I think that's what inspired me to make my work really powerful to look at. His work is very sharp, and that's exactly what I wanted my work to come across as.


Friday, 3 May 2013

Spider diagram

I made a spider diagram of all the different areas within the African culture to help me with research.

By making the spider diagram it was easier to find what I was looking for and it was easier to help me decide on what was important to research for my fmp fabric.

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Spider diagram

Below is a spider diagram of all the ideas I came up with for the theme Journey.

I've circled the word Culture because that was the theme I chose, I chose culture because I figured that there are a lot of different ways I could create something from it. 

The culture I chose was African, as circled below, I chose this because by looking through books and doing research on the internet I came to find that it was the culture I was most interested in.

Thursday, 25 April 2013

Tattoos

Primary Research 

These are some photographs I have taken of my family and friends tattoo's