BA Portfolio: Aly Schaper
Thursday, June 12, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Monday, April 28, 2014
Final Portfolio
All Photos Displayed on http://thisladyphotographs.tumblr.com/ for best viewing
Series One:
"Fabelhaft" Series
Photography
(Existing Prints at 8.5 x 11 inches)
2014
Series Two:
"The Explorers" Series
Photography
(Existing Prints at 8.5 x 11 inches)
(*"The Explorers One" has one print at 3 feet x 5 feet)
2014
Series Three:
"Body" Series
Photography
(Existing Prints at 8.5 x 11 inches)
2014
Series Four:
"Seasons or Something" Series
Photography
(Existing Prints at 8.5 x 11 inches)
2014
Series Five:
"Tin Foil Queen" Series
Photography
(Existing Prints at 8.5 x 11 inches)
2014
Piece Six:
"Self Portrait"
Photography/Oil Painting Mixed Media
8.5 x 11 inches
2014
Materials Cost
Paint/Canvas/Gel Medium/SD cards/TONS of Photo Paper/basically photo materials and props/misc.
Total:
297.52
(just to give you an idea, one package of photo paper is about $40)
+Prints for Portfolio Show Covered by Grant
(Grant $445)
Total:
297.52
(just to give you an idea, one package of photo paper is about $40)
+Prints for Portfolio Show Covered by Grant
(Grant $445)
Juried Show
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Camera USA National Photography Award and Exhibition 2014
Exhibition on view: August 11 - September 26, 2014
All photographers residing in the United States are invited to submit one photograph taken in the United States after January 1, 2012 for Camera USA: National Photography Award and Exhibition 2014.
The photography exhibition will be installed in The von Liebig Art Center’s Frederick O. Watson Gallery from August 11 through September 26, 2014. The von Liebig Art Center is located in Naples, Florida in the heart of the 5th Avenue South shopping, dining and arts district.
Eligibility
Photographers residing in any of the fifty States in the United States of America are cordially invited to enter one photograph taken in the United States after January 1, 2012 and not previously exhibited at The von Liebig Art Center. Membership in the Naples Art Association is not required. Accepted photographs must remain on display for the entire duration of the exhibition and will not be available for pick up until 12 noon on Sunday, September 28, 2014.
Entry Fees
Applications will be accepted online until May 12, 2014. The non-refundable application fee is $32 (for current NAA members the entry fee is $27) and is payable online by credit card.
Presentation and Size Limitations
All photographs accepted for the Camera USA Exhibition must be delivered in exhibition ready condition. Photographs must be framed or gallery wrapped with no staples on the sides and a proper hanging wire with raw wire ends taped. For safety reasons, glass may be used only if the frame is 20 x 20 inches or smaller. Larger frames requiring a glazing must have Plexiglas.
Dimensions : Maximum framed dimensions not to exceed 40 x 40 inches. When completing your Juried Art Services application, you will be asked to enter the framed dimensions of the photograph you wish to exhibit.
Notification
Notifications will be posted to your Juried Art Services account on June 19, 2014. To view your results, log into your Juried Art Services account and go to “applications.” Mouse over the Camera USA application bar and click on it when your cursor becomes a hand symbol. Your notification letter will then open. The Camera USA award winner will be notified by telephone or e-mail on August 1, 2014.
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Art and Fear: Second Response
“The point is that you learn how to make your work by making your work, and a great many of the pieces you make along the way will never stand out as finished art.” Pg.6
“You make good work by (among other things) making lots of work that isn’t very good, and gradually weeding out the parts that aren’t good, the parts that aren’t yours.” p. 26
1.
What work have you made that seems most yours? Why?
-At the beginning of the semester I answered that my photographs seemed to be the most "mine", but I had no idea how true that would become. I have really transformed into a "photographer" now. I really know how (and of course will continue to learn) to own my photography. It's become something very personal to me.
“Chances are that whatever theme and technique attract you, someone has already experimented in the same direction. This is unavoidable: making any art piece inevitably engages the larger themes and basic techniques that artists have used for centuries. Finding your own work is a process of distilling from each those traces that ring true to your own spirit.” p. 103
Who are artists that are making work that relates to you? Are there other influences? How are these other influences connected to your work?
-Again, I can't get away from some of my answers from the beginning. Sebastien Michel is still one of my biggest influences, but I've also discovered so many more. Stephane Fugier has seemed to become one of the biggest influences. You can go back in my blog to see other artists as well. I also really discovered throughout the semester how much I rely on music. It's almost kind of embarrassing because I've listened to some of the same bands for almost ten plus years now, but they have helped me through so much and they have really pushed me through some creative processes. I think I've discovered that almost everything is a influence to your art. Everything is connected to my work I mean, I my photography at this point kind of thrives off of everyday moments and materials, I kind of have to find inspiration in each and every little moment.
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“And while a hundred civilizations have prospered (sometimes for centuries) without computers or windmills or even the wheel, none have survived even a few generations without art.” p. 104
Discuss, in your own words, why you think this is so.
-I think art is the mind's natural way of getting ideas out. It's a form of communication, it's a form of recording, it's a creative outlet. Art serves so many different purposes, but most importantly it keeps our brains from exploding. Computers and windmills and the wheel all came to be because of art, someone had those ideas and someone drew them out. Art is what comes first. <-yeah, past me is pretty spot on. Mostly art has always been used as least as some sort of a tool in some sense. It's like our most basic tool.
“Art is something you do out in the world, or something you do about the world, or even something you do for the world. The need to make art may not stem solely from the need to express who you are, but from a need to complete a relationship with something outside of yourself.” p. 108
Which of these ideas resonates most with you? Why? If they all resonate, how do they differ?
-I think similarly to how I answered this before, all of these ideas are connected. For me personally, I think I do a little bit of each. It just depends on what you're doing, what sparked what you're doing, and who exactly you are doing it for. You can do art to express who you are and still be doing it out/about/for the world. The "relationship" that I need to complete varies pretty often with each piece, and honestly, I think sometimes my work does end up being a lot more about myself than I realize.
“Making art depends upon noticing things-things about yourself, your methods, your subject matter.” p. 109
What do you notice about yourself? What are your methods? Subject matter? The answers do not have to be limited to art related topics.
-I notice that I have become a lot more self aware and a lot more self involved as I become more involved in my art. I am a perfectionist. I like to have plans, even if they don't work out. I like working in a studio (as a method). I set aside certain time periods for everything. My paintings are based off of photographs. My subject matter is almost always of people. If it's not of people it's of things that people care deeply about.
-For comparison I'm just going to leave my old answer here. I've become probably too self aware and too self involved now that I'm incredibly involved in my art. It only becomes more and more true each day. I'm probably going to grow old in a studio full of my art, with my dog as a lonely, stubborn artist, and honestly, I've become quite happy with that image. I'm still a perfectionist. I still want to improve on my environmental photography but I certainly still prefer to work in the studio. My paintings HAVE strayed away from my photographs! Look! A change! But I also feel as though I currently have no direction in my painting and that I am drowning because of it. My subject matter is always of people. So basically I've just become a more awesome, more self-involved/art-involved version of myself! Hooray!!!
“The only work really worth doing- the only work you can do convincingly- is the work that focuses on the things you care about.” p. 116
“All this suggests a useful working approach to making art: notice the objects you notice.” Pg.101
What do you care about? The answers do not have to be limited to art related topics.
-I care about people, and this is the most obvious subject that spills into my art. I care about identities, little everyday moments, conversations, overlooked details. I care about myself, a relatively new concept, trying to grasp still. I care about music, dogs, dancing, mental illness, erasing negative stigmas about a variety of subjects! I care about things that are genuine, that are honest, that are true.
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