Monday, March 28, 2011

So I'm Way Behind On Updates, but...

Yikes, I've been so busy this poor blog has been neglected. More will come shortly, but as for now it will suffice to say that set up is underway!

But what I really wanted to feature in this entry is the "Apprentice Recommendation" from my sister, Devon, for Necronomicon, a collection of short stories by HP Lovecraft. For the actual display, there will only be room for a few sentences on the rec card, but she really got carried away and it was too good not to feature somewhere. So here it is, the uncensored, uncut version of Devon's recommendation for Necronomicon.


This dread book first came into my possession as I traversed through a bazaar in Istanbul. Having long held a fascination with ancient and mysterious tomes, the bookseller’s humble tent called me to it. As I perused the selections, I couldn’t help but notice the merchant looked shifty, in the most literal sense of the word- he fiddled with his hands, rocked back and forth on his heels, his eyes continually flickering to a locked wooden box on the edge of the table. My curiosity whetted, I approached him and asked what it was. He responded, shakily saying it was free and then tore off through the bazaar, tripping over carts and chickens as he did. I shrugged off the incident, certain some sort of mania had overtaken him.

The locksmith I found in the city even seemed to be reluctant to open the box. He claimed he was getting “bad vibes” from whatever was housed in the box. As soon as it clicked open, he took my money and retreated to the back of his store. The book I found was the Commemorative Edition of the Necronomicon- the Best Weird Tales of H.P. Lovecraft. The air immediately grew chill and I forced the book into my satchel, venturing back out into the darkness.

I ignored the book and the chill in the air everywhere I brought it and the ominous howlings that occurred whenever I looked at it, until I was on the airplane flying back to the United States. I paged through the book, often stopping to admire the many and varied illustrations. It engulfed me. On that trip back, I read many dark and disturbing tales, including but not limited to “The Call of Cthulhu”, “Shadow over Innsmouth”, “Herbert West- Reanimator”, “At the Mountains of Madness”, “The Thing on the Doorstep”, “The Hound”, and “The Outsider”. While these were gripping and horrifying tales, I was occasionally distracted by the chanting in Latin from somewhere on my airplane.

I returned to my hometown of Arkham, happy to be done with the long journey home. However, I couldn’t help but notice a lurking fear hanging around me and following me wherever I went. The night, I was haunted by horrific nightmares. Tentacled gods and reanimated horrors chased me in my mind. I awoke, screaming in terror, to find myself back in my bedroom. Despite being back in my familiar surroundings, my mind still felt trapped in the nightmare. A harsh wind blew my window open, the curtains now reaching out and fluttering like Cthulhu’s tentacles searching for me. My cats fled from the foot of my bed and out the door. The book- the dreadful and unspeakably horrible book- sat on my bedside table, illuminated by the bright moon shining in. Even my pentagram area rug glowed in the darkness. I continued to be haunted by these visions for weeks and months, until I became gaunt and pale from lack of sleep and worry. Vestiges of my dreams began appearing in my waking hours, draining my will to live.

Naturally, that is why I give my highest recommendation to The Necronomicon by HP Lovecraft. Without a doubt, your nights following your purchase of this book will be filled with the horror you have been searching for all your life!


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Goals Accomplished and Horrible Acts of Book Violence

I am happy to say that I believe I accomplished my break goals, and maybe a little more! I wanted to finish my 3 paintings, and I'm about 2/3 done with each one. I also sewed a bag (with tentacle handles!), made a sample floating shelf, collected 9 other books to mutilate and make into shelves, complied about 100 genre appropriate books to fill the shelves! In addition, I found some other props to fill the "shop" area: two chests, about 7 goblets, a dozen tiny goblets, a magnifying glass made out of a horn, gargoyle bookends, and my plague doctor mask. I made small changes to the logo and started work on a business card and continued working on employee recommendation cards.

Overall, I'm pretty pleased! But I have a lot of work ahead of me. Last weekend I went to the hardware store and bought 9 more L-brackets and cut up all 9 books, so they only need to be screwed in now. I also looked at the molding, and I think I'll be buying some to paint and make into frames.

This weekend, I hope to go to Woodcraft in Parkersburg to get a large wooden oval for the store sign! Because work on that needs to start soon if I'm going to make it myself...

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Goals for Break

As much as I'm looking forward to finally relaxing over winter break, I'm also looking forward to the time I'll have to spend time on just my capstone without worrying about other classes. I have two major goals:

1) Finish all three portraits. This will be very important for me to do, as I can foresee these becoming a burden when I'm trying to get everything else finished, printed, and constructed in the last semester.

2) I'd also like to start experimental construction on floating bookshelves, since they seem like something I can do myself and I'm thinking of switching over to all floating shelves rather than the standard ones you'd normally see in bookstores. It looks like I can buy them from places like Barnes and Noble (not outrageous, but this might still be more expensive than my budget will allow. Another, hopefully cheaper option, is making them myself.

It'll definitely be a bit of work, but I don't think it will be unmanageable. Here's to an excellent last winter break!

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Critique!

I had my second critique, and I think it went pretty well. I have some things to tweak, but I'm fairly confident moving forward. I still like my project at the end of the semester, which makes me quite happy; I definitely chose the right one.

Things I am keeping in mind:

Logo: tweak the ship's color, fix weird little negative space shapes, push the boundaries of the inner oval with the tentacles a bit more...

T-Shirt: look into making a female cut for the "feisty heroine" shirt, and look at prices

Portraits: go with a grey background on all of them, and figure out how to frame them (all the same? Different depending on genre? Using trim from the hardware store?)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Still painting. I took a picture of my progress thus far, excuse the crappy quality, on my phone. So here it is.





It's coming along okay, but I have a lot of work left to do. And I have no idea what I want to do with the background...I will most likely be asking about that in the critique.






I was also looking at the nook I want for my exhibit...the ceilings are actually pretty low, but I think that could work to my advantage to create the feeling of a more enclosed space. I'll probably be thinking about how I could utilize the space and bookshelf designs this weekend...

On a semi-related note, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows has come out tonight, and I am quite excited! Those books have been a major inspiration for me since I was 11, and I don't think it's a stretch to say that they've inspired my entire generation as well, not to mention that the series is likely the reason that most people my age read at all. Really, they're probably a big part of the reason I became interested in doing art at all; illustrating the books and drawing the characters when I was younger made me realize that art was something I enjoyed and wanted to do for the rest of my life. So horray for Harry Potter!

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Painting!

I've finally started the portraits! I have 24 x 18 wooden panels that I gessoed during the week, and this past weekend I've started on HP Lovecraft. I brought an easel into my room, so I have a pretty convenient set up so I can work when I feel inspired to. So far Mr. Lovecraft is coming out decently, but I messed up a bit on his eyes and mouth so now he looks a lot like Richard Gere. Really weird how that happened, but I'll start posting process pictures shortly.


I'm painting this guy.















Not this guy.









My big critique is one week from now. I'll be working pretty hard this weekend...I'd like to have the portrait nearly finished if possible so I can get feedback on how to continue with all there. I also want to start sketching out some shelf and exhibition designs as well. I'm a bit nervous, but I'm sure I can pull it all together (plus I'll have a couple days to relax(ish) afterward!).

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Free Books!

Ely Chapman had their book give away this weekend, so I woke up early on my Saturday to stand in line so I could get my pick of sci fi/fantasy books! I managed to fill a big cardboard box (and I had a rough time carrying it back to campus) so I think I have a good start for books to fill my shelves. There are even some hardcover books, and ones that I won't mind destroying to make the base of my floating shelves (*cough*Eragon*cough*).

I had a meeting with Beth last week to talk about my portraits. She seemed to think that I was on the right track, and gave me some wooden panels to gesso so I can get started, as well as an easel that I set up in my room so it's easier for me to work. And since I'm planning on working in my room, I've decided to go with acrylic paint so I'm not inhaling awful oil paint and medium fumes. My gesso will be dry by the weekend, so I hope to start HP Lovecraft and have something decent to show for my critique.

Also, I've download some t-shirt templates and I'm playing around with ideas...I've got one or two with a wrap around of my kraken, and then for the others I'm playing around with fantasy cliches. When I was in a fantasy lit class in high school, we discussed cliches a lot because it's nearly impossible to find fantasy without them: some are necessary, some are horrible, some are fine if the author can put a new twist on them. But cliches are something any fantasy reader recognizes (for example, "The Chosen One") and gets a kick out of making fun of them.