Sunday 25 January 2015

Unplanned Self Portrait Series

2 Many, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
'Quidditch Selfie' Apparently, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
Okay, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
Ooh Interesting, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
Disjointed, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
Demonise, Chaz Howkins, 2015, pencil
On both Saturday and Sunday morning I woke up to find several self portraits in my sketchbook which I had very little memory of creating the nights before.  My usual style is fairly clean and precise, so I always find it interesting how free and careless my drawings are whilst under the influence (and how narcissistic my subject matter is).

Frog Island Photography

Chair, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph

Figure, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph

Dyeing Factory, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph

Admirer, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph

Bottles, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph

Keep Out, Chaz Howkins, 2015, photograph
Earlier this week I went to Leicester to explore the abandoned buildings of Frog Island, an industrial area in which the buildings have been subject to several fires and fell into disrepair.  Most of the buildings were either boarded up or fenced off, making them inaccessible.  However we easily gained access to one of the factories via an open back door.  I explored the building with my camera, capturing the textures of the crumbling structure and objects that I felt told a story of the building's past.  I included a distant figure in a few of the images to give them a greater sense of life, which I feel makes the images appear more haunting.

Monday 12 January 2015

Print workshop

Zombie Barbie Etching, Chaz Howkins, 2014, etching

Red Zombie Barbie, Chaz Howkins, 2014, etching

Coloured Zombie Barbie, Chaz Howkins, 2014, etching, fine liner and watercolour
I think the gritty texture created by the etching really compliments the dark subject matter, making this medium very appropriate for my work.  I enjoyed this process and though it was quite time consuming, I think I will be using this process again as it creates very dramatic outcomes.

Print workshop

Plate after being drawn on

Plate after being submerged in acid

Finished plate after being inked

Plaster workshop

Wax Skellington, Chaz Howkins, 2015, wax
Our brief was to create a wax cast of a piece of fruit; I first considered casting various fruits such as bananas and a lemon to put together to create a figure or doll but thought this may be a little over ambitious.  Instead I carved a Jack Skellington face into an apple to make it appear like a smaller scale pumpkin carving and created a wax cast of it.  I feel the end result was quite successful as the texture of the wax makes the face seem aged and somewhat eerie.

Plaster workshop

Creating the clay walls 
Removing the apple from the plaster

The three parts of the plaster casing and removed apple
I found the process used in the plaster workshop quite interesting though felt it was rather long and tedious, while I am pleased with my outcome I feel I could create a similar piece using a simpler technique.

Painting workshop

Model, Chaz Howkins, 2015, acrylic & pencil on canvas
In an earlier photographic series, I captured my zombified Barbies against plain white backgrounds with bright lighting, to make them appear as if they were posing as models.  These images were quite striking as it made the dolls appear more human despite their blatant mutations.  I chose to base my painting off one of these images as I felt the strong composition would translate well into paint.  I feel the use of rich colours and violent brush strokes adds to the sense of grotesque while making the doll appear fairly lifelike.