June Previews 2021

To Be Determined

“No matter the medium, be it clay, paper, wood, or metal, my artistic process remains the same. Ideas arrive from the flow of working, memory, or from bodily experience. In my mind the images of the ideas glow, giving warmth and light to my inner life. Once I begin to work with materials to create the idea in the world, the glow fades. The idea transitions into a thing in the world, which I must reckon with and make the best it can be. Striving to realize the idea keeps me engaged, while working with materials offers ideas of its own. Subject matter, material, and scale can change, yet each work directly references the natural world, my body, and memory. With the intertwining of concept and material, making art unites my mind and body.

Once assembled, I projected the shadow of the puppet onto a screen and filmed it. The bird exists in three dimensions spatially, and in three dimensions metaphorically.  It is an object that moves. It is also a shadow, an image of no thickness. It is a short video, a record of the transience of light at a particular point in time. The object must function as a moveable sculpture, as image/performance, and as a narrative. As I finish, I see the results informing all the work going forward. This project takes my work from the concrete to the metaphorical, as the physical presence of the bird becomes a literal shadow, and then a flicker on a screen.”  

This semester I worked with Chuck Stigliano, sculptor and puppeteer. He generously shared his knowledge and expertise as I began something completely new in my second year of graduate school. The shadow puppet and the video are both prototypes for my work this summer. I consider neither of them finished pieces. The work on this page is a rough sketch for emerging ideas that unite my internal and physical practice.

For the background in the second video, I used projections of images from the photos of my daily walks taken in April 2020, and collaged in March 2021. Projecting these images large on a white sheet lends an organic quality and ties this work to earlier efforts.

Cooper’s Hawk Shadow Puppet

Cooper’s Hawk Shadow Puppet Videos

Cooper Hawk Shadow Puppet Video 1

Cooper’s Hawk Shadow Video 2 (music credit: 3 Sérénades, Op.96. Casano-Guestin)

Details: Shadows, Mechanisms, Character

2 Videos of Projected Photo Collages

Below is a video of photo collages from 2020 projected onto a hanging piece of white fabric. I would like to print these images directly onto the fabric, hang them in space, and then experiment with projection.

Photo Collage Projected onto hanging fabric screen

Below is the slideshow used as a background in the video.

 Photo Collages of Walking April 2020, collaged March 2021.

 

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Inspiration and Process

Reference photos of a coopers hawk on the Minuteman Bike Path in Arlington (left), first shadow puppets (right). Below is a clip of the first bird shadow puppet movie.

 The First Idea

This video has been in the back of my mind for a while now, as I watched the shadows projected on the white sheet:

 Summer Night. Animation in Procreate.

The Semester’s Technical Progress

 

Sketches and prototypes first. It became clear that the answer would not be as simple as I wanted, at first anyway. Then came scissor linkage research inspired by cosplay wing makers. The first wings using a scissor linkage broke, so I made a stronger set. I added a tail mechanism that uses a different principle.

Then came trial and error to make the wings close to the body, the secondary flight feathers, able to extend and fold. I switched to copy paper for these experiments since card stock is expensive and I wasn’t having much success.

Getting closer. I added an extension on the wing for the primary feathers to lift.

The final bird has a changeable head that attaches with black velcro onto the body. The body also attaches with velcro and is removable to access the workings of the puppet. I built a type a trigger mechanism (thank you Chuck!) so that one hand could operate the wings and the other, the tail, while also holding the puppet in the air. I also made a stand for the bird that its wooden pole fits into.

If you would like to see more of my research, please visit https://blogs.massart.edu/ederosas2/may-2021/

To see the recent Thorndike Walk photo collages, please visit https://blogs.massart.edu/ederosas2/2021/04/30/walk-continued/

Thank you.