Privacy PolicyCookie PolicyTerms and Conditions
Showing posts with label my art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my art. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 January 2013

My First Re-Root - a.k.a - "Brain Drain" - circa 2001 - 2002

Just thought I'd show you guys how I taught myself to "re-root" although at the time I didn't even know it was called that, or that people even did this to dolls - I just had an idea and thought I'd go with it and see if it was possible, and wow it was and it worked out so much better than I hoped it would!

Brain Drain started life (her Art-Life) in a box of dolls inside my local Air Ambulance Charity Shop, I needed some "victims" for some ideas I had and when I walked into that shop and saw a huge box of dolls (all kinds of dolls) I just had to buy them, but not before I asked "How much for the lot?"

It was definitely £5 well spend as I now had loads of "victims" to play with and inspire me... and inspire me they did!

As I was looking them over, I started wondering what a doll would look like with wire instead of hair, this may seem like one hell of a weird leap, but I had recently acquired a car full of computers and monitors that my college were throwing out after upgrading the computer rooms... I had to sign a waiver just in case I was planning to sell them and really had to go some to talk the incredulous looks off of the Technician's faces but as soon as I saw they were stripping that room and loading all the computers into a skip, I began to have ideas of what I could make out of them, and then I saw that box of dolls I just knew what I had to do and so the idea grew and grew until it got so all consuming I had no choice but to give my idea a try, and so I did, and Brain Drain was born!




She originally had a full head of blonde hair, but that had to go, so I grabbed my trusty "Stanley" and my scalpel, ripped her head off and set to work removing all the hair from inside her head.

It took hours to get every single piece out and I ended up cutting my fingers to ribbons in the process, but it was nothing on what came next!

I gutted 5 or so monitors and computer towers and keyboards and a stack of mice ( if that's the right word?) later that day, placing the wires in one box, the circuitry in another and any little bits, screws and other interesting looking other gubbins in another, and then it was time to set to work on the doll again...

After gathering as many different coloured bits of wire as I could and untwisting them from bundles etc. I now had to work out exactly how to get it in side her head, and not only that I had to work out a way to keep it in place once I had it where I wanted it.




As the her hair holes were certainly not large enough for even the thinnest wire I had to enlarge the holes or slice new ones into her head as I went along - more cut fingers!

I learnt that if i knotted each piece of wire after threading it through her head I could make it stay in place or a while at least, but of course due to the weight as I got closer to completion I realised I would need something that will hold the knots inside permanently, I found some Epoxy resin for sale in my local garage for repairing car bumpers, which seemed like the thing, but after trying this I discovered not only would it be expensive to finish her using it, but it just really wasn't practical, in the end I used a combination of I know not how much super glue and the epoxy resin  and what do you know, it's still in there all these years later... in fact as I discovered while styling it, that it is still in there fast!



She was then spray painted and mounted - using wires again - onto a wooden board, also spray painted. The corner pieces are circuitry from computer mouses mounted onto plyboard and then mounted again onto the wooden board on which the doll forms the central piece.
The board is itself mounted on baton and the metallic paint continues into this area also.

In her hand she holds a led bulb from inside a computer, she has a small circuitry chip inside her mouth and another complete with wires stuck to the side of her head, for some reason prior to my taking this photo earlier the ball joint in her right arm shifted so she no longer is lying prone with arms in "crucifixion" position as she has since I first raised this board on completion .. this wasn't intentional, her arms just fell into that pose, but to me it summed up all I wished to say and so for the last decade or so (until today) they have remained in that position... never mind though at present she looks as if she is reaching out with her right hand trying to communicate with the viewer - so this also works, and I can easily move her arm back once I finish this post and go back upstairs.

Over the years since making this art piece I have become more "internet savy" and discovered sometime in the early 2000's - instances where people had changed the hair of their dolls, using a method similar to my own - minus the wire that is!

I decided to give it a go myself, and over the last 8 years, have customised many dolls with new hair of various types and even wrote a "Lens" on Squidoo explaining the different types of hair that are available commercially and how to go about re-rooting a doll for anyone who requires this information.. of course it has been several years now since I wrote that "Lens" and as I am learning new things all the time, I should really get it together soon and update it with some of the new things I have learned and some more tricks and tips etc.

One last thing I just have to say, is that once you have re-rooted a doll's head using wires and a big knife any other kind of re-root is an absolute doddle!!




Friday, 14 December 2012

Zomby and The Brainz


March 2012

Aaron's friend showed me a picture of a really cool t-shirt, and I couldn't resist sketching it!


I really liked it in pencil, but decided eventually that I should add some colour to it...

Zomby and The Brainz finished coloured version - I took some liberties with the colours as I didn't think some of the ones in the original image gave enough definition.





Tuesday, 4 December 2012

I've been busy hand sewing and have made myself a new bag!

April 2010:

I was going through some old jeans of my Son's that have been lying on my "use for pet bedding & toys" pile (I normally use them to make "rustle tunnels" for the ferrets and Fleecy lined "Hammocks" for the chinchillas) and I had an idea or a new bag and after several days I'd made this for myself!

I had to sew it by hand, as my mum still hasn't fixed the tension on my machine and given it back to me, and I'm way too much of a bloke to know how to do it myself.

I sketched out a rough shape of the size I wanted and used the "waist" area of the jeans as the base.

I cut it straight across the bottom, turned it in and sewed it shut.

I decided to keep the pockets on both the front and back as this would give me lots more places to stash stuff inside.




I cut another piece of denim, the same size as the "waist / bag" area as I wanted a "flap" at the front covering the pockets and keeping everything safe inside... this is the part I later "patch-worked".


The inside I lined with red and white striped Linen, and sewed a spare pocket from another pair of jeans onto the middle back, this is a great size for keeping my purse safe inside.



I then made a long shoulder strap by cutting a wide strip of fabric from one of the legs that were left over, I rolled this over and over until it was the right width, and then sewed the side seam of it all the way down the edge. While I was lining the bag, I left two gaps inside, one on either side and after I made the strap, I sewed the ends of the strap into each of these gaps, I finished the strap with a small label I took off the back of another pair of jeans, as the strap is so long it had a seam in the centre where I had joined two pieces together, so I covered this on the outside with the label.

It took several days as each stitch was sewn by hand including the outside patch-working but I'm very pleased with the result and better still it's totally unique, it's also like the "Tardis", so I don't really have any boundaries in terms of what I can take with me anywhere, with this bag I can take it all!


My Art - Various Collages


Very large, collage made from hundreds of images from magazines and catalogues  it was made for a college brief on the theme "His and Hers", the central image - the Yin- Yang Symbol was painted in Acrylic paint onto the centre and the images placed around where cut to form a frame around it.
The images have been placed onto a large sheet of cardboard.


The above piece was called "Chaos" and was made of cardboard and styrofoam mounted onto plyboard, then painted with a mixture of Acrylic paint and Enamel paint - it is now obsolete.


This one is huge and very heavy, it was made for a college brief on the theme "Icons", out of a mixture of painted images and paper ones. The Micheal Jackson image was cut out of a cover of my 7" Single P.Y.T which unfortunately I discovered was scratched to buggery and totally unplayable, still it made a great replacement for the "Jesus" image which I'd originally painted and disliked the style of (It was copied from a Medieval Russian painting - I loved the simplicity of the Madonna Image, but the baby Jesus was terrible) after I got the piece back from college and later discovered the state of my vinyl, I swapped the original for MJ! I did the same with the out of proportion Marilyn Monroe's head I'd originally painted, as I've always had a thing for clothing creases in art, I decided to change her head... I was lucky enough to find an image of "Olive" from the 1970's TV Series On the Buses which was almost the right size, so she became my new Marilyn! 
The board used for this piece is made of chipboard and as the whole thing is over 4 feet long and 1 foot wide, it is very weighty.


I was so angry that the college kept this piece even after they told me I could have it back as I had a buyer already lined up for it, this may seem stupid on my part, but the college happily allowed other people on my course to sell their work and for a great deal more than I would have made on this one. I was unable to make another as the central piece was a piece of tile I happened to find on a building site after taking a short cut to the bus on my way home. I painted a tiny silhouette of the Madonna and Child on in with miniature gold halos, then framed them and the plyboard I glued them too with some plastic and diamante trim I found in a haberdashery that I was unable to go back to again. These were then mounted onto a plyboard "canvas" which had been painted with my trademark Psychedelia  I would happily of kept this piece for myself, especially as I know the college only keep the work they take from students for one or two years before either offering them to other students to "Upcycle" or take home, or placing them in a skip to be junked! 
Past Students are not allowed take these pieces back after this time or even contacted to ask if they'd like to, the artwork produced is apparently the colleges to do what they like with...and that's what they like to do! *sigh* 



I painted a miniature landscape of the Black Mountain, framed it with a painted cardboard frame, and then mounted it to a wallpapered piece of plyboard, the whole thing is less than six inches square. It was made for another college brief but for the life of my I cannot remember the theme.


One of several Eye collages I have done over the years, the first was in 1992 when I covered a small 1960's Dictionary (front, back and spine) with them. I loved how it looked so much tat I went on to make a few cassette covers, cd covers, video covers and pictures with the same technique. Come to think of it, I really must do some more of these when I have time, I seem to recall I have a box of cut out eyes in my Studio somewhere... now all I need is the time!


Painted solid wooden board with plyboard strip - also painted, with mounted smaller plyboard and solid wood squares, topped with pieces of tree bark I found on my travels one day. I can't remember why I came up with the idea of using all these items in particular for a collage, but I'm glad I did as this is still one of my favourite pieces!


Small collage made from images taken from my first Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band CD  which was scratched, mounted onto solid board which I painted and scraped in places to give an aged effect. I think they must have kept this one too (the sneaks) as I don't remember what happened to it after my Degree, I definitely don't have it anymore, that's for sure!


                             Painted board with canvas strip, another of my favourite pieces.


This collage was also taken by the collage as a "Teaching Aid" and most likely has been thrown in the skip by now *sigh* it is part paint and part Vintage Tea Papers (used for the costumes) the faces are also paintings on paper, then glued onto plyboard backing. The background was painted in bronze acrylic paint, with a gold strip made from gold tissue paper, the Halos were made from stick on British Coins (I remember these from Infant School) that I purchased from the college shop - one great thing about the college also running many teaching courses! This I thought was symbolic of how "Religious" organizations can become big businesses, think TV Evangelists from a few decades ago! It was another piece I made in relation to the "Icons" brief we were given.


Sketch Book Experiment, I had bought some image transfer gel and I decided to test it, I fist photocopied part of one of my Mum's Rolling Stones L.Ps, reversed it on a computer, applied the paste and transferred it onto some 1970's fabric my Gran gave me, then painted around it in Acrylic Paint. I think it worked very well and will definitely use this technique again when I get inspiration again.


Sunday, 4 November 2012

Kaonashi, Susuwatari & Bou. - Spirited Away


Kaonashi, Susuwatari & Bou.
( Acrylic on Canvas) 
Spirited Away painting for Aaron 
-Copied from a Facebook advert -

(December 2011)




Saturday, 3 November 2012

Miscellaneous paintings

(Originally Posted on My Site, Multiply -1st January 2009.)


Tina Two....2006.

Thunderbird with Spindle Whorl.  Acrylic on cardboard 1997
Based on carving by Salish People.

planet of the apes. Acrylic on Plywood , 2004

2nd ever attempt at oils

Bateleur Eagle. Acrylic Wash on Paper...1991.

beatlespsmudgeedge.

Birth, Acrylic on Plyboard. (Aaron's Handprint) 2004.

Birth - collaboration with Aaron!
(Acrylic Paint on Board)
Software enhanced (to see how it would look!)
Blue Meany (Acrylic on Canvas Board) 1993

Cabaret. (Enamel on P.V.C) 2003

Cabaret 

Chaos (Now Obsolete) 2004Cardboard, Polystyrene, Acrylic & Enamel Paint on Board

Icons
Paper & Acrylic Paint on board

Close up of Basil Brush
- Acrylic Paint.

Embryonic Me.
 (Acrylic on Plyboard)  2004
Ex-Friend's gnome after I got at it!
Acrylic on Cement. 2002
Sadly it seems that this kind of thing can happen to your Garden Gnome when you're living with me! What can   say? I got offended by his always grinning at me and being lewd every time I made myself a cup of coffee, so I decided to take my paintbrush and extract my revenge while his owner was a t work one day, I think he looks much better now!

fairyland. 2008
(Pen, Brush & Ink)
This is just an experiment really, and still unfinished, as I haven't had time :(

Stencil Graffiti Piece - Spray paint & Pen on Canvas. 2004.

Self Portrait - Graffiti with books.
 Acrylics on Canvas. 2002, for brief on "Identity" College Work.
Granny takes a trip, Acrylics on Plyboard, glued o Gold Painted Tray 2004.

Halloween Disco Poster - 1990,  Indian Ink on Paper.
(I designed this as a poster for the Halloween School Disco in the  4th Year!)

Hel. Acrylic on Canvas (Close up - Unfinished) 2006

part 2 tryptich - Dada
Spray Paint on Canvas. 2003

Self Portrait with flags
 (Acrylic Paint on Textured Board.)
For Identity Brief, College Work 2002

Untitled
 (Acrylic Paint & Canvas on Board.)
2003

Abstract Self Portrait
Acrylic Paint on Muslin  2003







Angel and Devil.
Paint, Ink & Pencil on Plyboard. 2012.
Dada (close up - Now Obsolete)
A Collage of Found Objects, Paint & Street Finds. 2003.

Dada (remake)
A Collage of Paper, Ink & Paint. 2006.