Monday, September 14, 2009

a series of art, an exodus, and the aftermath...








G'day.....


Lots of major life changes since I last posted..


I am once again an official Houstonian and also unemployed....which I havent been in quite a long time. Job hunting is proving to be difficult but it is still early to give up too much hope yet. Seriously considering focusing on a teaching route....


The thesis show went quite smoothly, and I am quite satisfied with the pieces I created for it. While much of the in-progress art has been featured here, it would be wrong not to put up the culmination of much hard work. And so, here they are in the following order :


1 and 2 : These two are an album poster and a shirt design for the drone ambient duo Hammock. With Hammock being a band almost completely instrumental with very little vocals and lyrics, I chose to draw from their latest album title "Maybe They Will Sing for Us Tomorrow" and the overall feel of their music. Hammock certainly has an encompassing and ephemeral quality to their music, like a flock of Canadian geese across a winter sky. To represent this feel, for the poster I came up with the image of a fair girl staring through an old window pane, her hand pressed up in the glass in a thoughtful and introspect gesture and expression. The shirt design works as progression with the girl now absent and departed, leaving behind only a handprint as a legacy.


3 : This piece I came up with late in the series. This one is show poster for the band "A Northern Chorus" a thoughtful and beautiful indie band from Canada. The inspiration for this piece comes from their song "Winterize", specifically the chorus : "Pockets full of spent bullets, old train tickets, and pictures of the sun that couldn't warm up those winter eyes". The concept was the simple idea of taking the phrase "winter eyes" and creating my own visual representation. In this instance, it features a maiden with cold blue eyes and tears that have become snowflakes from their icy chill. The snowflakes were actually hand made using the classic method from childhood.


 cont. previous entry...

2 comments:

Virginia Broersma said...

Nice work, Lane and good luck with the job hunt. It's a tought market right now so I hope you can find something that makes you happy!

Danielle Feliciano said...

Lane, I love that you use "fair" and "Maiden". I love you Lane, and your art!