Showing posts with label Sketchbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sketchbook. Show all posts

Monday, 20 May 2013

New Designs and Moulds : The Crystal Palace and Smithfield Market

For the past two weeks I have worked on new resin designs and a range of bangles inspired by The Crystal Palace and Smithfield Market, (working from archive film footage and photographs).  All of these are now at various stages of development from 3D models to part made up blocks.


©Jane Dzisiewski : Cut up photocopies of drawings - Smithfield Market


©Jane Dzisiewski : design produced from a collage of drawings - Smithfield Market


The Crystal Palace - ironwork and windows


©Jane Dzisiewski : Crystal Palace Design


©Jane Dzisiewski : bangle models - new sizes and designs


I also tweaked two of my existing designs and scaled new sizes from these and created a new bangle design for the Crystal Palace work.  The first blocks are now finished so I'll be cutting stones from these today and assessing what changes to make to the resin opacity and colours I've used so far.


©Jane Dzisiewski : resin block - detail


©Jane Dzisiewski : resin block - detail


For the colours I have been referring to the Pantone Colour forecasts for Spring and Autumn 2013 (see here).  I've also introduced references from The Grammar Of Ornament by Owen Jones as this contains the information he used for The Crystal Palace when he was overseeing the creation of the various exhibition Courts.



Owen Jones - The Grammar of Ornament : Moresque Designs - Alhambra Palace



I've been mixing various blues, reds, blacks, creams, off-whites and metal colours.  The image below I found on Tumblr gives an idea of the range of colours I have been mixing within this remit.



Pinterest : Tumblr image - no record of  citation


©Jane Dzisiewski : resin block detail after first sand



There's now two and a half weeks until The Contemporary Craft Festival in Bovey Tracey and much is still to be done!  For all festival information, list of exhibitors and details on advance ticket sales, please see their website here.






Tuesday, 7 May 2013

The Crystal Palace: An historical patchwork

Fuzzy photographs and lithographs. Piecing together research for the Crystal Palace is like trying to complete a giant jigsaw puzzle with most of the components missing.

A patchwork of information and a patchwork of pattern.



The Crystal Palace, 1851


The Crystal Palace: blurred images - filling in the gaps


The Crystal Palace, 1851


The Crystal Palace, 1854 - lithograph


©British Heritage The Crystal Palace, 1854 - The Alhambra Court : Owen Jones


Owen Jones’s interpretation of the Alhambra Palace inside The Crystal Palace is known as one of the best examples of Victorian Polychromy ever created.  It is virtually impossible to make out the individual patterns from Delamotte's photographs but Jones relied heavily on his collection of pattern "The Grammar of Ornament" when designing the various Courts inside the Palace.  This was the first book I purchased when I started my Printed Textiles Degree at Manchester Metropolitan University back in 1986 and it soon became my reference bible for pattern and has remained so ever since.

Below are three images of the Doha Tower, Qater under construction which depict a snapshot in my minds eye of how it must have been inside the Crystal Palace - in this case, the layering of Arabic forms over an ironwork structure. 



Doha Tower, Qatar - Jean Nouvel Architecture


Doha Tower, Qatar - Jean Nouvel Architecture: under construction
 

Doha Tower, Qatar - Jean Nouvel Architecture


Jane Dzisiewski - patchwork star


The Crystal Palace: a patchwork of pattern


Walking around this vast, 'Victorian Pleasure Dome' with exhibits from all over the world must have been a very overwhelming experience.  The "Guide to the Crystal Palace and Park - Facsimile edition of 1856 official guide" lists for example the following Courts:-

Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Alhambra, Assyrian, Bzantine and Romanesque, Medieval, Renaissance, Elizabethan, Italian, Stationary, Birmingham, Sheffield, Pompeian, Musical Instruments, Foreign Glass Manufacture, Ceramic, Sculpture Galleries (English, German, Greek, Roman, French, Italian, Gothic, Renaissance), Portrait Galleries (English, German, Greek, Roman, French, Italian), Industrial, Geology.



The Crystal Palace Guide Book listing 203 of the 217 sculptures within the Greek Court


Alongside the museum like Courts, there were also hundreds of market stalls selling goods from across all the Continents - as well as exhibits of industry, machinery and photography.  What photographs and lithographs there are were mainly taken for advertising purposes, so very little photographic evidence is in existence of the less high brow side to the exhibits within Crystal Palace, or even of the ironwork and glass structure itself.  I find this frustrating because I want to see the nuts and bolts and not just the shiny version of events.  Regardless of this, I primarily see what I always look for and that is pattern and negative space - and I see this everywhere.  I will be be bringing this to my work and filling in the gaps with my interpretation of how the Crystal Palace experience must have been for the visitors. 



The Crystal Palace - lithograph: Open gallery towards the garden


I've included the picture below because it is one of the few images I have seen which actually shows that the Crystal Palace was not just a place for the social elite.  The lithograph above depicts sedate Victorian society enjoying the Crystal Palace in virtual solitude, whereas the Palace was one of the most visited places with over 100 million visitors during its 80 year existence.  This painting by Blaikley is at odds with the normal paraphernalia produced and manages to capture the atmosphere and bustle within the Crystal Palace at the height of its popularity.



The Crystal Palace: Painting of the interior by A. Blaikley 1866


Friday, 8 February 2013

Sketchbooks - once a necessary evil but now my friend

In honour of #SketchBreak on Facebook and Twitter run by the Design Museum, I have assembled a few images below of my sketchbook work from 2007 up to present day.

During the process of flicking through all my black books of various shapes and sizes, I thought back to the mid 1980s when I was at Manchester Polytechnic doing BA Hons Printed Textiles.  I moaned about having to 'do' sketchbooks and yet 20 odd years on, I have done a complete about turn and see my sketchbooks as the most useful tool to collate my ideas, inspiration and design progression. 

This change of heart is partly due to the fact that for the duration of my Textiles Degree, the majority of our work was done on large A1 sheets and pinned on boards rendering sketchbooks surplus to requirements.  Fast forward to 2007 at the Manchester College, we did not have the luxury of our own studio space so all work was done in sketchbooks.  I adapted and found a way to use them that works for me - a mixture of photography, images from books, drawings, tracing, quick sketches, maquettes and writing.

I used to be very timid with my choice of sketchbook but now it's 'the bigger the better'.  I feel no pressure to fill a page or to make it pretty for other people to admire, as this is primarily a vehicle to record what is going on in my head and for developing new designs.  When I first start a page, it may have only one small picture and a bit of writing but over time I add to this - and eventually pages are often crammed with information gathered from a particular train of thought.  One day I can think I have had an excellent idea and then after digging around to check, I discover a picture of another makers work who has pipped me to the post.  In the picture goes as a reminder to shelve that idea and turn the page in my head and move forward taking a different tack.  This is why I like to have as much research as possible in the form of photographs and books around me, so that I always have a large amount of material for inspiration during the inevitable 'back to the drawing board' moments Designers encounter.

My sketchbooks are a collection of things that inspire me at any given time and I develop and interpret these ideas or themes in my work.  Land and seascapes, ancient artefacts, decorative ornamental designs, japonaiserie, textiles, sculptures, paintings and architecture in all their forms are in evidence - but the common element I am drawn to in all of these are pattern, colour, textures and line.  It has dawned on me this week that I haven't travelled as far as I originally thought from my textiles days; the same aesthetic which was in my textiles designs continues today in my jewellery pieces.  Applied Arts though gives me a chance to bring my inspiration to life beyond the page and the story about how a body of work has evolved, is an intrinsic part of its final success and (most important of all) its integrity - all of which is backed up in my sketchbooks.


Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 / Starting point - drawings of a bronze Roman Pin

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 / Roman Pin - Bronze

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - Silesian wirework

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - Silesian wirework

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - Drawings inspired by wire netting on Hastings seafront

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - Drawings of wire inspired by Hastings seafront

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - Stones and mounts inspired by artefacts in La Seu Cathedral, Palma, Majorca

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - drawings of knitting, crochet and chainmail

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009 - crochet / dreamcatcher (inspiration for mounts)

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2009

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2008 - Textiles neckpiece

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2008 - Textiles neckpiece

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2008 - Textiles neckpiece

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2007 - Barbirolli Square Fountain, Manchester. Inspiration for textures - water

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2007 - wet pavements - St Peter's Square, Manchester. Inspiration for textures.

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2012 - Smithfields Market roof. Inspiration for Manchester Craft & Design Centre 30th Anniversary exhibition, Crafting History.

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2007 - Yorkshire Scupture Park - Barbara Hepworth

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2007 - Yorkshire Scupture Park - Barbara Hepworth / Henry Moore

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2012 - Smithfields Market ironwork roof. Inspiration for Manchester Craft & Design Centre 30th Anniversary exhibition, Crafting History.

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2012 - Smithfields Market ironwork roof.

Jane Dzisiewski: Sketchbook 2012 - Designs for mounts inspired by Smithfields Market ironwork roof. The Crafting History exhibition which this work was made for has been and gone, but this sketchbook will continue to grow and evolve over time.


Anyone can join in on Twitter using the #SketchBreak hashtag - and please see the Facebook album here which Crafts Council UK has uploaded and includes sketchbook work by some of their other Hothouse jewellers.

Monday, 28 May 2012

RBSA Gallery (Coast), Samples & Research

I'm working on a collection of pieces for an upcoming exhibition at the RBSA Gallery, Birmingham - Coast.  This is also complementing my Manchester Craft & Design Centre project, as I have been looking at more ironwork and architectural features, moving on to piers, jetties and Victorian seafronts.


Jane Dzisiewski - Sketchbook // Drawings of Manchester Craft & Design Centre


The resin fishing net design above came about after a weekend in Hastings back in January 2009 when I was there on an enameling course.  Last week I had a look through some old images of samples I made from then (part of my final college project), which I thought might sit nicely with research I was doing for Coast.

I knitted and crocheted silver and copper wire to enamel - domes and decorative shapes inspired by old ironwork.  Below is an assortment of photographs showing a few of these samples, (some of these were later made into stones and incorporated into jewellery).


Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009


Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009


Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009
 
Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009


On the Sunday morning in Hastings, I had a few hours free time and took myself down to the seafront to take pictures of coastal features which I could initially interpret using wire to use for enameling.  I now plan to revisit this work and develop it further.


Fishing Nets - Hastings, January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski samples - Enamelled knitted copper wire, January 2009

Fishing Nets - Hastings, January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Fishing Net Design (Resin) - March 2009

Circular Netting - Hastings, 2009

Circular Netting - Hastings, 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples  // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Hastings January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // April 2012

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples // January 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Crochet resin stone

Jane Dzisiewski - Samples //April 2012 - Crochet Stone


For Coast I'm using mainly my Fishing Net design (as above), and Isar and Tree designs (below).  The exhibition at the RBSA Gallery runs from 21st June until 31st August 2012.



Stone from the bank of the River Isar, Munich

Jane Dzisiewski - Isar design - Handmade resin stone

Stone from the bank of the River Isar, Munich

Jane Dzisiewski - Isar Design

Stone from the bank of the River Isar, Munich


Isar Design - Handmade resin stone

Fishing Net & Isar Designs - Handmade resin stones

Jane Dzisiewski - Tree

Black Coral

Jane Dzisiewski - Tree Design June 2009

Jane Dzisiewski - Tree Design

Jane Dzisiewski - Handmade resin stone, Tree design