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At
the start of the week I had to deliver a 10 minute presentation about my most
significant outcome of BA2b, thus I chose my publication, as to me it carries
great value as the conclusion to my main project of the second year. I
generally struggle with public speaking, however despite my nerves I was able
to deliver what I felt was an effective presentation. It felt strange that it
was my final official assessment of year 2 before deadline. For the remainder
of the week I finished off my proposal, research and supporting
documentation. I aimed to have all my work finished by the Thursday so that I
had no trouble submitting for assessment on the Friday.
Below I have included evidence of my presentation.
10 minute
Presentation Evidence
For the 10 minute
presentation I chose to focus on the publication I made as documentation of my
primary outcome from year 2 the life-size hybrid wolf/horse sculpture.
Plan for
the presentation:
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Wednesday, 10 May 2017
Week 27
Week 26
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I
had aimed to spend this week writing my proposal, however due to my strong
dislike of public speaking I was distracted by the presentation on the
following Monday, despite this I was able to settle on a strong bibliography
and finished a large portion of my proposal. I spent the last three days of
this week planning and preparing for my presentation. I wish it had been
earlier in the unit as at this point I only want to focus on research report
and practice. I am really feeling the effects of not having a studio space I feel
quite lost.
Below I have attached my bibliography for my 1000 word proposal.
Bibliography
·
Baker. S. (1993) Picturing the beast, Animals, identity and representation.
Manchester university press. Chapter 3. Mad dogs and rhetoric of animality.
77-116.
·
Beresford. M. (2013). The White Devil: The Werewolf in European Culture. Reaktion Books.
·
Blom, J. D. (2014). "When Doctors Cry Wolf. A Systematic Review of the Literature on
Clinical Lycanthropy". History of Psychiatry 25: 87–102. Available
from: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0957154X13512192
o
[Accessed last- 21/01/2017].
·
Byrne. N. (2012) Art-icles: William Blake’s Nebuchadnezzar. Available from: https://revelsmagazine.wordpress.com/2012/09/19/art-icles-william-blakes-nebuchadnezzar/
[Accessed last- 03/02/2017].
·
Coppel. S. (2012) Picasso Prints, the vollard suite, 1st edition. British
Museum Press.
·
Culler. J. (2004) Narrative theory: critical
concept in literature and cultural studies, chapter 8: Story and discourse in
the analysis of narrative. 117-130. Routledge.
·
Dodds. J. (2011) Psychoanalysis and ecology at
the edge of chaos, Complexity Theory, Deluze/ Guattari and Psychoanalysis for a
climate in crisis. Routledge.
·
Fig.1. Blake. W. (1795) Nebuchadnezzar, Colour
Monotype print with additions in ink and watercolour. Available from: http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/blake-nebuchadnezzar-n05059
[Accessed last- 13/12/2016].
·
Eilsler. R. (1978). Man into wolf: An Anthropological interpretation of Sadism, Masochism
and Lycanthropy. Ross-Erikson Publishers Inc, U.S.
·
Ellis. S. (2010). The man who lives with wolves. HarperCollins.
·
Linnell. J. (2002) the fear of wolves, A review of wolf attacks on humans. Available
from: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1026&context=wolfrecovery
[accessed last- 29/01/2017].
·
Lopez. B. (1979). Of Wolves and Men. Simon & Schuster; Revised edition edition.
·
Marvin. G. (2012). Wolf (Animal). Reaktion Books.
·
O’Connell. M. (2017). ‘Your animal life is over. Machine life has begun.’ The road to
immortality. Available from: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/mar/25/animal-life-is-over-machine-life-has-begun-road-to-immortality?CMP=fb_gu
[Accessed last- 04/05/2017].
·
O'Neil. O. (1988) Plains Indian and the Wolf: The Pawnee. Available from: http://www.wolfsongalaska.org/chorus/node/178
[Accessed last- 03/02/2017].
·
Penny Dreadful, Season 3 Episode 3 (2016),
created by John Logan. Sky Atlantic (TV).
·
Shrestha. R. (2014) Clinical Lycanthropy: Delusional Misidentification of the self,
Available from: http://neuro.psychiatryonline.org/doi/pdf/10.1176/appi.neuropsych.13030057
[Last visited- 05/02/2017].
·
Taake. K.H. (2016) Solving the mystery of the 18th century killer “Beast of
GĂ©vaudan”. Available from: http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2016/09/27/solving-the-mystery-of-the-18th-century-killer-beast-of-gevaudan/
[Accessed Last-02/02/2017].
·
Taylor. S.C. (1909) the origin of the werewolf superstition.1. Available from: https://ia802606.us.archive.org/9/items/originofwerewolf00stewrich/originofwerewolf00stewrich.pdf
[Accessed last- 02/02/2017].
·
Wells. C. (2013) Psychoanalytic Approach to Little Red Riding Hood, Available from: https://prezi.com/f9i7iqjr2uc4/psychoanalytic-approach-to-little-red-riding-hood/
[Accessed last- 01/02/2017].
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Monday, 1 May 2017
Week 25
This week I had my last tutorial to discuss my 1000 word proposal for my research report next year, which I have been working on the back burners (so to speak) all of BA2b, my main concept is too focus on a similar plan to my 3000 word text from BA2A; as the concept is close to my practice and of great interest to me. Overall the topic of the text will be to consider the margin between Human and non-human, furthermore how the hybrid of the two shatters the linear margin separating the two, thus explaining the stigma with which society views such figures. The topic will be studies focusing on Wolves and humans as the two have a rich history with varying views and relations across different continents. Furthermore the lycanthrope is perhaps the most famous hybrid of the human and the non-human certainly perhaps the most interesting.
Plan:
Wolves + humans
Discuss the relationship between humans and wolves throughout history, the fear rural villages and towns in Europe viewed the creatures, the mass culling's during the 1800's and the cease fire in WW1 between Russia and Germany to hunt a super pack of wolves killing soldiers from both sides. Furthermore the respect with which the wolves were seen with by Native Americans mostly the Pawnee tribe who were called the Wolves by other tribes.
Origins of the werewolf story
A discussion of how the werewolf has dominated modern media in horror and sci-fi, but look at how the werewolf began through tales of rogue beasts, and animalistic murders in Europe, and superstitious tales of members of the Pawnee tribe who possessed legendary wolf like abilities to hunt and fight.
Clinical lycanthropy
Look at how some people have beliefs of lycanthropy yet suggest how clinical lycanthropy hasn't captured the medias attention as well as the fictional physical metamorphosis from human to wolf due to the possibility that the clinical lycanthrope is still just human yet with animalistic tendencies. Alternatively the physical werewolf is a human with the physical superiority of a wolf allowing him to realise and indulge the dark aspects of the human condition. Case studies including Sigmund Freud's investigation into the wolf man.
Human/ non-human margin
Either in a separate discussion or conclusion consider the margin between human and non human organisms and how the werewolf is a controversial figure for shattering this margin.
Furthermore this week I have started painting again to try and find a new medium to convey the themes of my practice. I aim to create a detailed portrait of a human in a violent state perhaps a still from a tv show or film, therefore I settled on a scene from Vikings in which the main character Ragnar is covered in blood. Vikings seemed appropriate as the characters act impulsively and truly to their basic instinct. Once I've finished the portrait I want to scan and print it onto calico which I will paint a stitch into.
Below I have documented the development of the painting this week:
This has reminded me how annoying painting can be, normally 80% of the time I hate the painting its only in the last 20% of the paintings development that it starts to take shape, alternatively with sculpture theres a sense of the works progression throughout the works development hence why I enjoy sculpture so much more.
Furthermore later this week I disposed of the stop motion stage (which failed) which I made several weeks earlier, as I was pulling it apart I made an accidental discovery, the single layer of latex which I painted over the stage was pulled into a thin transparent sheet which I then started to push my hand through, I was trying to use the latex to disfigure the human form:
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