Thursday, March 29, 2012

Lino Cuts

Our guest artist, Dan Wood, came on Tuesday to teach us some copper plate etching and printmaking techniques. He left behind some linoleum. I quickly snatched it and carved this image, which is based off a drawing I did of a puppet in Palermo. I bought a cheap pair of linoleum carving tools at a flea market near us a while ago- they finally came in handy. I did 4 prints today, all experimental, but these are the best 3. I tried adding color, but I personally like the monochromatic one.



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Puppets

I was so inspired by the puppets in Palermo, Silicy that I did this colored pencil drawing last week. I designed the patterns on the clothing based off mosaics and textiles we saw in Sicily. Unfortunately it is cropped awkwardly at the top due to the scanner but you can see most of it. There's just tree up there. Currently I am working on a self portrait collage in painted fabric and paper for Sunday's show at Circolo dei Artisti.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

PARIS

Last weekend I flew into Paris to see my friends Emily, Sarah and Genny. We all met up and stayed at Genny's aunt and uncle's house. We were treated very well, and had a great time. My friends had all been staying there before, so they were great tour guides! Paris is like a dollhouse city. I ate so much baguette and goat cheese. The food was delicious. At the first cafe we kept getting heckled by some French guy who insisted we could speak French. It was so pathetic and hilarious. I can't wait to return...

The first thing I saw was Notre Dame. We walked inside and I couldn't believe the size of it. I've seen many, many churches in my stay in Europe, but this was much different than the rest. It was built around 1163 into the 1240's, but much of the stain glass was destroyed in 1786. Luckily the north and south rose windows were spared, so I believe they are still original glass. They were really wonderful. 




Quaint Paris

Some more quaint Paris. This is Saint Germain en Laye, a western suburb of Paris. We stayed with Genny's Aunt Mary (Uncle Caroll was out of town so we didn't get to see him). It is a very beautiful town, and I enjoyed staying there immensely. 

The next day we went to the Louvre, which was the best thing I saw in Paris. I was overwhelmed not only by the beauty of the art pieces, but by the building itself. The pyramids were designed by the architect I. M. Pei, and I believe they were finished around 1988. The Louvre Palace was begun as a fortress by Philip II in the 12th century, and it was turned into a museum in 1793 (during the French Revolution). There are gilded frescoes and stone inlays all over the ceilings and walls.

Our first stop was Egyptian Antiquities, of course. This is a famous statue is called "Le Scribe Accroupi."


Sarah and I in front of the Winged Victory. As you can see, Emily cropped the most important part of the picture...

In front of "La grande Odalisque" (1814) by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. I bought a postcard of this. That's how much I liked it!

Emily and I posing in front of some huntress statue.

On my last day we saw the entire Eiffel Tower, not just parts of it sticking up behind buildings. It was bigger than I imaged, and much more detailed. Although it was freezing that day, we got a chance to sit and sketch for a bit. 

After the Eiffel tower we went to another delicious cafe. Here is a drawing of Emily while we sat.

The Friday before I left for Paris, our class had an art history tour to Sacro Bosco. It was opened in 1552 by Vicino Orsini, a member of the proud Roman family. After Vicino died however, his family let the park turn into a forest. In this state, it actually became inspiration for Dali and French painters. It is easy to see why, because the dense forest would have allowed these people to stumble across the magnificent statues of turtles, monsters and elephants, to name a few. The most amazing thing about this park is that it was made to look like ancient ruins, although I've never seen any "ruins" like this anywhere else in Italy. A very clever concept. And it was so fun to draw here. 

This is me standing in a house that was purposely built on a very tilted angle. I am standing up straight in this picture. We all had a lot of fun trying to defy gravity in this house. I had so much fun, I almost missed the bus home.

Me inside the mouth of this monster (the mouth of truth).              


Graphite and Pen

Pen
After Sacro Bosco, we went to Villa Lante. There were well-kept hedges, fountains, gardens and statues everywhere. I had fun hanging out in the gardens.




Tuesday, March 13, 2012

SICILIA


We came back from our 10 day tour of Sicily Sunday night. It was a 10 hours bus ride from Rome to Calabria, the tip of the boot. That night we stayed in a hotel and caught a ferry the next day to Messina, Sicily. We stayed in towns Siracusa (Ortigia), Selinunte, Trapani, Palermo, and Naples.

ORTIGIA

 You can see Mount Etna steaming more than usual in the distance.

My favorite place in Ortigia. There were these monstrous magnolia trees and I swung on the roots that were growing downwards. 

We were invited to the home of Jim Fowle, the former EHP coordinator. He had these 2 balconies where we all ate pizza and chilled for a couple hours. The house and views were incredible. 

We made friends with two little boys named Matteo and Leonnardo. They kept riding their scooters past us tying to see what we were drawing. We then offered to do portraits of them. We gave them the drawings.

In front of some Greek amphitheater...


 "Oreccho di Dionesi"
This was a cave carved in 6th century BC until 3rd century BC. It took 12 generations to build.
It was an acoustic chamber, and so unbelievably tall. It is an artificial limestone cave.



SELINUNTE


 Here we also had the fanciest hotel because this place is in the middle of nowhere and the only people here are fisherman.

The Acropolis, 6th-5th century BC. Temple built by the Greeks.


GIBELLINA AND POGGIOREALE, 7 March

Gibellina was a town destroyed in the 1968 earthquake. A memorial was erected by the designer Alberto Burri, entitled, "Cretti." What was amazing is that the ruined town was essentially paved over with concrete, like a cemetery for the ruined buildings. It is also at eye level, so you can see over all the city blocks. Everything is to scale of the old town. I thought it was very strong conceptually. The people of the town decided to erect "New Gibellina" about 20 kilometers away. We took the bus into New Gibellina and we were all dumbfounded because there were no people or places to buy food. It was essentially a ghost town. Apparently the people who moved there after the earthquake did not like the new town. The architecture was extremely modern, and so much different than the Old Gibellina. It is understandable why all those people moved out. Meant to be a thriving artist town, it was fatally built  in the middle of nowhere.

Gibellina Memorial

Drawing on the Gibellina memorial.

Poggioreale

Poggioreale: A surprisingly intact staircase in a rotting building which some people actually dared to climb.

A horse or cow skeleton.




PALERMO: 9 March

I really enjoyed the puppet museum (Antonio Pasqualino Museo, Internazionale Delle Marionette). So much so, that it has inspired me to make a puppet of my own. It was really one of my favorite things we did all week. I sat in the museum for a couple hours drawing the puppets. I would like to construct a puppet of my own out of found materials.


Some of my puppet friends. After the museum we got to go to a puppet show at the "Opera dei Pupi." The show was called "The Great Duel Between Orlando and Rinaldo for the Beautiful Angelica's Love." None of it made any sense to us whatsoever, because the plot was nonsensical, and it was also in Italian. The most impressive part to me was that they made the puppets that they used in the show, which were absolutely gorgeous wooden and metal plated soldiers. They manhandled these things on stage however, slamming them against each other and into the walls during battle scenes. The best part was when the puppet got it's head chopped off. It was made with hinges so it kind of just popped open. Other puppets got their torsos split open. The sets were also hand painted, and Nino Cuticchio's (director) son played the piano di cilindro. The men who held the puppets also used their voices for the puppets and background noise. The piano was so appropriate for the puppets. I loved how authentic the experience was. The only real technology was the lighting. 

Puppets from Mali, circa 1950

Puppets by Anthony Burgess 1990


1935 puppet from Milano

Cappuccini Crypt.
I went to the crypts to draw well preserved mummified corpses dating from the 1700's until the 1920's. The craziest part of the crypt was a little girl named Rosalia Lombardo, who died in 1920. She was injected with a substance and is literally so well preserved she appears to be sleeping. I have many more drawings but here is one... 
I also spent the week sketching the beautiful mosaics in churches.

This was our beautiful room in Hotel del Centro, Palermo.

Cattedrale di Monreale cloister (12th century). 
This cathedral is known for its lavish mosaics. I was very overwhelmed with the intricacy of the designs all over the floors, columns, and walls. It was magnificent. 


NAPLES

Cheese...

The Raffaele Rubattino
We took an overnight ferry from Palermo to Naples, which allowed us to cut down the 10 hour bus ride. The boat was very nice, complete with an arcade, movie theater, library, restaurant, etc. Since we are hip art students, we just sat in the library on our own time and critiqued sketchbooks. The seas were quite rough, but it felt like the boat was rocking me peacefully to sleep. 

When I arrived in Naples, I had a croissant at this lit-up cafe. 

Silly picture of our group outside of the Archeological Museum. Last time I was in Naples, I went here, and really enjoyed it. Our coordinators gave us tickets to a modern museum this time called Museo Arte Donna Regina, which in my opinion was only "ok". It was all fine though, because I had the best pizza of my life beforehand at a restaurant called Pizzeria Decumani. 3 euro for a personal margarita pizza, and I ate the whole thing, finishing first. It is true that Naples pizza is the best. We also saw "The Veiled Christ" statue by Joseph San Martino, and "Disengano" by Francesco Queirolo, both of which I found very beautiful. Then we drove the 2.5 hours back to Rome!