"Carve
two forms from life (a small, plastic animal) using soap as your
medium. Observe and depict proportions. Apply concepts of time to one
of your carvings so that the form no longer represents your chosen
animal. Use the same animal for both forms."
For this project, we were to carve two animals using soap... At first I thought it would be fun: something new. I was so wrong... it was beyond hard and very challenging. For me, I like to look at one small detail and work with that, and then go to another area. This project challenged me because I couldn't look at just one area, I had to look at the whole form before carving.
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| the start to my first carving |
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| when the polar bear began to take shape |
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| start to my second bear |
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| both polar bears side by side |
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| both polar bears together |
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now the fun part: destroying one of my soap carvings!!
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| started dripping water on the bear |
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the water gave it an awesome texture, so i froze the bear to see what would happen
(and because polar bears live in the arctic) |
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| i started to cut him in half... |
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one chunk i dug a hole into and stuffed it with cotton, and dripped hot red wax on it.
(i used cotton for the polar bears fur, and red wax because red is danger, and polar bears an endangered.) |
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| showing both of the halves |
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| started burning the other half, i liked the black smooth texture it gave |
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i stuck a bunch of pins into it, taking bit apart and moving it around and then used rubber bands.
(i wanted the rubber bands because polar bears eat seals, and seals are rubbery) |
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| i added black ink to the wax and cotton ball sculpture because polar bears have black skin, and i like how it didn't exactly stick to the wax/soap |