Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Monday, 16 June 2014
Friday, 13 June 2014
‘The Twisted and Strange in Horror films’
FINAL PROJECT STATEMENT
‘The Twisted and Strange in Horror films’
My love for horror films stems from deep
into my childhood, memories of time spent bonding with my Dad. Watching them
with my dad always made me feel safe and protected. I believe this is the
reason why I can see the humour in horror rather than watching in fear.
The film ‘Silent Hill’ (2006) directed by Christophe Gans inspired
my research and set the scene of my project. The film-
set in daytime has a slightly atmospheric mood, everything seems normal at
first until a siren sounds and daylight fades to black. The walls begin to
peel, and the horror begins as mutated ‘things’ come out. This pattern
continues throughout the film. I am interested in why people are afraid or
spooked out by the disfigured and animalistic ‘creatures’ in these kinds of
films.
My research began with the making of hybrid,
‘weird, dark, sinister, twisted and strange characters made from a mixture of interestingly
shaped and textured natural items that had been found on park visits and fruit
& veg markets which I painted black and white to add to the mood. These
characters form
the basis and development for my fabric collection.
The
shapes and textures of the ‘creatures’ form the shape. The marks within my
drawing to create the base fabric design.
The
overall collection is dark, largely black with a little white and a touch of
navy. A dark collection allows viewers to focus
on the details of the surface fabric. The fabric is 100% polyester due to the
manipulation techniques used.
The manipulation method I have taken on is a moulding
process whereby the fabric is wrapped around a solid object and boiled in sugar
water which helps the fabric to keep the shape of the object. This is a waste
free process as the water and sugar is recycled repeated for every sample
created.
Using this technique allows me to create innovative heavily manipulated
sculptural 3D fabrics. Each fabric is produced using one continuous length of
fabric.
The biggest struggle I have had to overcome with this
project using this technique is how temperamental the boiling stage can be, you
can never know exactly how the shape will come out, the same shape can look
completely different with every fabric so it is difficult to plan the outcome
completely. Colour has occasionally been a problem as the sugar boiling process
caramelises and burns in the water therefore dying white fabric.
I have purposefully adapted this collection to allow the
viewer to interpret the pieces as they wish. They can be viewed as wearable
art, when worn the gathered/ruched structures of the garments create form that
aim to disfigure, warp and distort the natural body shape. When hung they can
be visualised as more of an installation/art pieces.
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