Feb. 7th, 2007

Sculptures

Feb. 7th, 2007 06:30 pm
thewingedword: (to sleep perchance)

I made both of these last year, actually.

This sculpture was carved out of a chunk of plaster the exact size and shape of a Supersized McDonalds cup. I know this, because that's what my teacher used for the mold. Basic carving methods, water to soften and chisels to shape, a filler for bubbles and a final sanding, metallic paint for the finish. Mine admittedly doesn't deviate much from the original shape, but I wanted to do more surface ornamentation, so I stuck with a basic form. Art teacher called it a schmoo, and in fact still calls me Schmoo, so that I've come to answer to it quite as familiarly as my own name.


This sculpture I made with basic, normal clay-coil techniques. The raised eyebrow and nose of the upper face are basically my favorite things ever. The finish is a dark red-brown wax, rubbed in and rubbed off, with several layers of sand glued to the inner surfaces.


ETA: I hate dealing with timestamps. Argh.
thewingedword: (boom boom)

I just realized that my position paper topic (Neil Gaiman's modernization of mythology in his work) basically gives me free license to read his books (Good Omens, American Gods, Anansi Boys), browse his blog, and look up obscure books of mythology, all in the name of research. I am brilliant.

In that vein, looked up the Four Horsemen on Wiki, and found interesting things. Turns out that the White-Horsed Horseman is more popularly viewed as the Antichrist, and that Pestilence is just the horse. He also carried a bow, which confused me, until I saw "And I saw, and behold a white horse: he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him", which explains it. I like the crown better, too.

"And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand. 
And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine."
Oh, Famine. You are so cool. That quote makes rather more sense when you realize that it's about a quart of wheat for a full day's pay.

Random interesting fact about Death's Pale Horse: "The word used to describe the color of the 'pale' horse is the Greek word chloros, or a sickly yellow green. It is meant to convey the tinge of the deathly ill, or recently dead. Since the literal translation does not carry these connotations in English the word is rendered 'pale' in most translations."

Historically, the view of Christ as the rider of the white horse was a minority opinion but was still held for a time by such men as Jonathan Edwards.
Jonathan Edwards! My AP US History teacher told us about him. He had the crazy eyes, like John Brown. Every time we ran across someone like that, she would say "And he had the crazy eyes!" and we would all laugh and flash crazy eyes at each other. Good times.


If Supernatural is going to delve into Christian stuff, they should go into some of the cool old mythology. Mostly because I need, if not an episode, at least a fic in which a small town is going crazy, people who've never shot anything bigger than a rabbit in their lives going after their neighbors like rabid dogs, and they're searching so hard for a demon that they miss (or almost miss) the woman in the corner with red hair and a laugh like a machine gun. Or, or, or, orange eyes. Eyes like fire. Hmm.

Profile

thewingedword: (Default)
thewingedword

April 2009

S M T W T F S
   123 4
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags