Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2013

THE UNVEILING OF THE NEW WATTPAD HQ

Last night I attended the Wattpad Open House to see their new headquarters.
Finally I was able to see the outcome of the wall murals that Emilia and I had created and to view the result of Interior Designer Mette Keating's  hard work!
It looked terrific!
I wish I had taken a picture of some of the wallpaper she dressed some of the rooms in.
It was beautiful.

It was a shame she couldn't be in Canada to attend. I was surprised by the magnitude.
I knew the scale in numbers, but to see it in person was quite impressive!

It was a great feeling to witness the positive feedback and to see others taking photographs of our work.
Margaret Atwood even made an appearance! She didn't make it very far past the door, as

Hopefully by sharing the images I took (probably should have used a flash, the lighting wasn't ideal) you will understand how I felt standing there.
I'm quite certain my sleeplessness has effected my photoshop accuracy, but I'm too excited to delay this post.









Tuesday, January 8, 2013

THE HAPPY SHOW

Stefan Sagmeister is brilliant. I've been slowly reading & re-reading his book "MADE YOU LOOK" for a countless number of months. I love that his work is always so personal, emanating subtle but potent pearls of wisdom to inspire. I also happen to dig his handwriting.

Through my wonderful design mentor Megan Oldfield (of Coolaide Design), I had the opportunity to attend the opening party for The Happy Show in Toronto this evening. Megan took on the colossal task of designing the exhibition and did a phenomenal job.

Stefan Sagmeister spoke briefly during the introduction, but made himself available to the crowd to answer questions and be engaged in conversations. I had to psych myself up to speak to him. It was difficult to catch him with innumerable interceptions by other attendees, plus I was hesitant to interrupt his eating of a hot dog. I was nervous. I approached him at the bar, grinning like a fool and fumbling my words. He immediately shook my hand, and was quite surprised when he asked me questions. The queries I rehearsed in my head were forgotten, and I only managed to crack out two:

What advice do you have for a newbie in the design industry?
If I were trying to attain a job at your studio, how could I impress you?

He told me he would be looking for something new, a service or skill that his company didn't already possess. Of course good ideas were a major factor. It was 50% good ideas and 50% personality and how well you mesh with the existing team.

What I wanted to ask him, if my nerves hadn't dominated the conversation, was whether he had a certain place where he tended to derive inspiration, and if he had any tips on obtaining confidence in one's work, whether that was something meant to be innate, or required work.

I still cannot believe he shook my hand!

The party offered guests unconventional carnival snacks (hot dogs, popcorn and candy) and an impressive selection of beverages. The special Happy cocktail was delicious.

The exhibition itself was very much Sagmeister. Filled with cute and quirky anecdotes, facts and observations. It fulfilled it's purpose. I was left contemplating the contents of my life and weighing them against my level of happiness.

My favourite aspect of the show were the hidden illustrations on existing fixtures and the interactivity of installations,  particularly the "suggestion" card machine (you will see my result below later). Upon entering/exiting the exhibition, there is a wall with an encased button that reads "PUSH BUTTON" and "take ONE" pertaining to a card that emerges.

Please excuse my terrible iPhone photography, I'm not sure what compelled me to leave all decent cameras at home.



This photo (below) I am only including to illustrate the atrocious zoom on the iPhone. Not impressed Apple! 



Yes, that is my thumb in the image below. 

















(But I came home and wrote this instead)


The Happy Show did indeed make me happy. However, it was more the warmness of Mr. Sagmeister that accomplished this than the exhibition itself (there was a disclaimer at the entrance, see 5th photo from the top). I am almost ready to rescind the belief that interesting design opportunities and experiences are not possible in Canada. Almost.

I am back to work at St. Joseph Media tomorrow, and potentially for the next couple of weeks. I had a surge of inspiration and progress in my portfolio redesign after perusing Jessica Walsh's website. Hopefully the momentum will continue and I will have something to post on that in the near future!

I have booked a trip back to London for February and I absolutely cannot wait! I feel as though as soon as my feet reach English soil, my veins will be flooded with radical creativity.


Wednesday, January 26, 2011

NEUROCHEMISTRY

To help us choose subjects for self-directed briefs last term we partook in a mind mapping exercise. One of the three avenues I came up with was psychology and mood disorders.

For the self-directed brief I am working on now deal with neurochemistry. I have been reading a very engaging book ...

I've been looking art therapy exercises, particularly ones that fall into three categories: emotional, relaxation and happiness.

These are ones that I found particularly relevant:

HAPPINESS
Take photos of things you think are beautiful Draw a quote you like Represent freedom Document a spiritual experience

RELAXATION
Mandala (circle with a centre) depicting yourself as you are now Draw outside Use colour blocks to create an image
EMOTIONAL
Paint a mountain (what makes you happy) and a valley (what makes you sad) Release a balloon with a message attached Design a postcard you will never send Draw three wishes Draw yourself as an animal A free drawing
Keep an art journal

I chose a few to test out and record how I felt after completing, one or two from each category.

Take photos of things you think are beautiful
Mandala (circle with a centre) depicting yourself as you are now
Use colour blocks to create an image
Release a balloon with a message attached
A free drawing

At first I experimented with using the activity to try and improve my memory. I recorded my dream as soon as I woke up, did an exercise and then wrote what I recalled from the dream again. I got rather tired of recording the same information and realized it was just better to focus on how the activity effected my state of being.

First I tried the colour block exercise.

Next up was the Mandala... which left me feeling a bit angry.

The free drawing activity left me with the ability to concentrate.

Then I gave the mountain/valley exercise a go, but had a hard time thinking of things that made me happy/sad.

My favourite was the balloon send-off! It was pretty cathartic but somewhat disappointing... as you will see in the last photo.


After researching, my initial reaction to the symptoms of bipolar disorder was that they seemed typical of what we experience on a daily/weekly basis, particularly in London. I created a worksheet for people to fill in for 3-4 days, twice a day that indicates how they are feeling and what they are up to during the time.

I then made a graph of each person's feelings and where they fell in the range of symptoms from depression and mania.

My last experiment was recording where I felt symptoms of bipolar disorder during my journey from home to Uni. I generated a large list of symptoms to refer to and gave them numbers.


It's been since organized into an info graphic.. I am considering making a book, a handbook for 'Life Disorder' that encompasses all my experiments and their findings.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Xmas Family Jumpers

I had to keep this Christmas design a secret! I made this traditional Canadian xmas pattern with cranberry chains, snowshoes, feathers, kissing balls and pinecones to screenprint onto jumpers. This was my gift to my family this year. I wanted them all to have to wear silly turtlenecks and pose for a family portrait (negatives need to be developed).

These are the initial sketches then drawn over in black...


Then they were scanned in and printed on transparency sheets, ready for the exposing machine!

I also made a few cards for friends as tests (see below).


Here are all the variants of the jumpers. It was impossible to find the exact same style/colour for everyone so some of them ended up being different. There were 13 all together. My nephew Eli arrived just in time for the holidays so he received a onesie as well.


Incase I haven't posted this yet...