Philip R. Obermarck

Visual Artist

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  • Print Portfolio Show

    This one is a bit late (like a month), but I’ve been a trifle busy post-Uni (more on that at another time). Overlapping our degree show, and running for a few days after, a number of  us were also in the Print Portfolio show at the Embassy Gallery.

    This show features prints, from Dry Paint, the print portfolio project arranged by Andrew Sneddon, one of our tutors at ECA. It was open to both first and second year MFA students and most of us in both groups participated. We also invited some of our tutors as well, so we had about 30 participants. The idea was that each artist would create a print in an edition of 35 and then the prints from each artist would combine to form 35 group portfolios. Each participant would get an edition of the group portfolio and the remaining 5 would be available for sale. This was the last show that the Masters of the Multiverse did as a group and nearly all (if not all) of us participated.

    You can see in the photos that we displayed the prints on tables with bare bulbs hanging above. This looked great in person but sadly the low lighting was anathema to my camera, since I did not want to use the flash. The bulk of the photos are of the reception itself, and my classmates.

    PhilO

    July 1, 2014
    Artists, Artwork, Exhibitions, School
  • Masters of the Multiverse: Degree Show 2014

    So, the degree show opened with two previews– the Business View on Thursday and the Friends and Family preview on Friday. Thursday’s preview went well, although there was very little feedback from the attendees. Since many of us had no business contacts to invite, we knew very few, if any, of the people who came. It also seemed the viewers were less interested in the artwork and more interested in the open bar (aside: bottles of Heineken and cheap white wine does not a reception make).

    The Friends and Family preview was fantastic. Great crowds and lots of questions and interest. I’m posting this Saturday afternoon while invigilating and we seem to have a very consistent flow of viewers through the galleries. there appears to be between 5 and 10 people in the room at any given time, and this has kept up pretty steadily.

    The show is open until 1 June and we will be invigilating it, as well as the Print Portfolio show at the Embassy, in shifts until it closes. Stop by and see it if you can.

    Now on to photos. This first batch was take during setup…

    This next batch were taken just prior to the opening or just as last minute preparations were being done….

    And finally, some photos of the show itself, including things outside the MFA galleries. Thanks to Al Hutchinson for being my roving photographer…

    Bonus photos: after the show closed we hung around the HUB, our little art shoppe, for a wee bit…

    PhilO

    May 24, 2014
    Artists, Artwork, Exhibitions, School
  • The End is Nigh

    The past couple of weeks have been spent in preparing our studios and setting up our degree show for next week’s opening. At the end of the day on Tuesday 20 May, we are done whether we want to be or not.

    We have three large studio rooms with 5-6 people showing in each one (some people have split their work between two rooms, though). For the most part, my room, the central one, seems to be pretty well finished. We still want to touch up the floors and maybe do a bit of detail work, but for the most part, everyone finished setting up last week.

    Last week, my sculpture was hung for display with the help of several technicians, a cherry-picker, and a stout rope. Max Young, the construction tech, helped me to build wall was along the back for the hanging of my paintings, and I then taped the seams and painted the wall. I installed the French cleats for hanging my paintings and now just need to do some final touch up and detailing.

    I sent my book off to the printers on Monday and expect to  see it back before Wednesday. It occurs to me that I may not have mentioned the book project in any previous posts. It was something I wanted to do from the beginning, but had back-burnered because of time and funding. I managed to make the time and found an inexpensive enough printer so I was able to get a small run made in time for the show. We will have a Hub or Shop in an alcove where prints and other items will be available for sale, along with my book, some carvings and prints of my own. This will also be where you can get your copy of the program, map of the show and postcards and business cards for the artists.

    My book is a retelling of the Norse Myth, the Mead of Poetry, using the artwork I’ve produced over the past year for illustrations. In the back are some photos of the work in the show as well. I’ve had 30 copies printed and although some will be sold at the show (I hope) I plan on selling whatever remains on the web and possibly in stores. Details to follow.

    Finally, the Print Portfolio project is nearing a close. I have produced all my prints but need to sort the bad from the good and trim them. Since they were all hand printed, I don’t expect to be able to trim them in a single stack, but one at a time. This could take a little time, but should be done early next week.

    We now have a confirmed show for the Print Portfolio, too. The Preview is on 27 May, 7PM at the Embassy Gallery and the show runs through 8 June.

    And, of course, don’t forget to attend the opening of the Degree Show, too!

    After the Degree Show has opened, I will post some photos of the install as well as the show. Stay tuned!

    PhilO

    May 17, 2014
    Artists, Artwork, Exhibitions, School
  • Getting close

    Yesterday I moved my sculpture up into my studio from the metalshop where I had been working. I am now past the point where I am generating large piles of wood chips and making annoying, loud noises, so I figured I was able to move to the studio without upsetting my other studio-mates.

    What I have left to do:

    • Finish the hands
    • Finish the face
    • Finish any other details I may have missed, or refine other areas
    • Give the piece an overall sanding to even out the form while still leaving the marks of the chisels and gouges.
    • Apply stain
    • Apply oil
    • Hang for display

    In order to finish all that I expect to be in the studio a lot in the next few weeks. When we return from our spring break we will be moving studios, so I want to be done (or close) by then, which means working over the break.

    I’m also, concurrently, working on a book which is sort of a combination Art Book and Story Book, which tells the myth of The Mead of Poetry, with my images alongside the text. If all goes well, that will be available for sale at the degree show.

    I am also now working on paintings, since the mono prints weren’t working out the way I wanted. I am still using the dried pigs-blood in acrylic medium, but am now simply creating images with my hands directly on the paper, rather than on a shed ofglass which was then transferred to the paper.

    An in order to try out some different finishes, I have also carved some smaller pieces that are completely unrelated save that they are from the same wood and use finishes I am experimenting with.

    So, all seems to be progressing.

    PhilO

    March 27, 2014
    Artwork, Exhibitions, School, Thoughts
  • Degree Show update

    With only three months left before the degree show, I find myself a little worried that I may not get everything done that I want to for my pieces. I have been concentrating lately on my sculpture, a life sized carving of a man hanging inverted by his ankles like a side of beef. This was inspired by the Norse myth of the Mead of Poetry, which you can read in a previous blog post.

    Since my last post about it, I have moved it indoors into the Metal Workshop. Why there instead of the Wood Workshop? Because they have a gantry in the Metal Workshop from which I can hang my piece when I need to see it in its display position. That and Mark is one of the nicest technicians at ECA and is happy to have some woodworking going on in his shop.

    Here, I built a trestle to rest the body upon and have been carving away at it. So far I have done some of the broader forms of the chest, worked on the neck and shoulders, carved away at the back between the arms, and recently began to work on some of the fiddly bits like the hands, feet and arms. The hands are blocked in as are the feet. I expect to continue work on the arms and then move back to the ankles and calves before really settling in on the head, although I may begin roughing in the face sooner.

    Once the entire figure is roughed in and blocked out, I can go back and work on the finishing details. I have yet to decide whether I want to keep the body covered in a carven texture, bring it down to a smooth, natural texture or leave it somewhere in between. I am also not certain what sort of finish I will use on the wood, nor whether I will fill in the cracks with resin. Though decisions will be made as I go along, and as I get further with the piece.

    As far as finishes go, I have some scrap wood that I have been carving on which I plan to use to test some finishes. Right now it is untreated, but I expect that I will try both traditional and untraditional finishes on it or similar pieces of scrap wood.

    PhilO

    February 22, 2014
    Artwork, Exhibitions, School, Thoughts
  • EN•TRANCE – Project Space with Emma Drye

    This past Monday Emma and I had our Project Space in C02, which we entitled “En•trance”. Coincidentally, Emma was also offered a opportunity to teach in Barnsley this week, so in order to allow her to accept it, we shuffled things about a bit, schedule wise.

    The concept we came up with in one of our early chats on this project was “doors or portals”. We decided that we would not collaborate on a single piece but would rather each respond to the theme in our own way. We both work strongly with narrative and we hoped that this would tie the whole show together. There was always the risk that we would each create something that had no reason to be in the same room as the other’s piece, but we kept abreast of each others progress and in the end it all seems to have worked out.

    My concept went through several phases before I came up with a final plan. I had been wanting to do something that hearkened back to my Norwegian heritage ever since I visited Oslo this past summer. I considered painting or drawing on door panels, telling a tale from Norse Myth, but decided to save that for another time. I began thinking of things I had seen while in Norway and it suddenly came to me.

    Scandinavian countries like Norway have a tradition of building stave churches. These early church structures were made entirely of wood and constructed in the same manner that they use in boat building. They began to fall out of favour in the Middle Ages and came to be considered obsolete in some countries  as newer construction methods became popular.

    When I was in Oslo, at the Museum of Cultural History, they have several portals from vanished stave churches. I got to thinking about them and how their removal had completely changed their meaning.

    The portals of a stave church are weighted with symbolism. They represent the threshold, the barrier between the real world and the spiritual world. These doorways are introductions to the space within and the carvings on the door posts speak in a language that was culturally understood. They prepared the faithful for their transformation from secular to sacred and helped to impart the message of the church.

    By removing these portals from their churches and placing them against a white wall in a museum, the symbolism changes dramatically. The functionality of the portal is completely negated since you can no longer pass through it. Their purpose as sacred art is also altered, becoming simply secular objects of art. The love, devotion and care that went into their creation is still apparent, but the reason for it becomes obscured.

    Many of these doors took imagery from Norse myth, perhaps to promote an association between the Christian faith and the old gods, during a period of transition. A popular theme is the tree of life, something the Norse might easily interpret as Yggdrasil, the world tree.

    So I decided that I wanted to construct a stave church portal, but also to highlight these conflicts that I saw with their transformation from sacred to secular art. I decided that I would create a tree of life design based on Yggdrasil as the foundation of my portal. I decided to use the CNC Milling Machine, a computer controlled router, to do the carving for me, so I chose to simplify my design since I was not certain of the limits of the machine. Both for monetary and for aesthetic reasons I decided to use blue foam, a form of polystyrene insulation, as the material to be milled.

    The first step was to create the design, which I did by hand in pen and ink. This was then scanned into Photoshop, preparatory to taking it into the 3d software. Since I am not that familiar with using 3d software, I chose to use a method that works fine for relief items but not for in the round sculpture, converting a greyscale image to a heightfield.

    Simply, the process is thus: in Photoshop or similar software, you create your image, keeping in mind that it will be converted to 3d based on the values of grey in the image. White will be the highest point and black the lowest. If your piece of polystyrene is 50mm thick, like mine, then a 50% grey will be 25mm deep; 10% grey is 5mm, a 30% grey is 15mm and so on.

    Once the greyscale image was complete, I cut it up into portions based on the size the CNC router could handle, each one approximately 1100mm x 350mm. These I saved as TIF files which I loaded into Rhinoceros, the 3D software I was using, and used the Heightfield from Image command. After some trial and error and minor manipulation, I had the STL files I needed to input into the CNC controller.

    I considered painting the surface to resemble wood, but opted to go with the bare polystyrene in order to emphasise the distance from the original portals. After assembling the pieces together and reinforcing the seams, I constructed a wooden prop to allow it to safely stand up. This would allow me to place the portal into the room rather than up against a wall, allowing people to travel through and around it, seeing both the facade and the reality of the backside.

    All the construction was done in C02, prior to our show opening on Monday. I spent most of Thursday assembling it and on Saturday, Emma and I spent some time deciding on the best location to stand it, so it would create a nice counterpoint to both her door and the main door to the room.

    So, with both pieces installed, we had the opening on Monday, which was fairly well attended, and then the critique in the afternoon. Unfortunately, I have been getting over a cold and was not feeling up to par, so I have difficulty recalling exactly what was said during the crit. From my notes, it seems that most people got the idea that it was a portal into a fantasy realm, but that the material and support structure in back detracted from that, so that rather than passing through and being uplifted, they were let down. This is not far off from what I intended, so I’m calling that a positive comment. Though I did not expect the connection to be made with Norwegian stave churches, I was hoping that I would have the opportunity to explain it.

    Unfortunately, we were trying a new crit format this week. Normally, the group makes comments one after another, and the artist says nothing until the end, when they can comment on their own work. This time the format was changed to one where each person in the group made their comment and then asked a question. The artist then responds only to the question asked and the next person comments and questions, etc. At the end, it was simply over without the artist being able to comment upon their work.

    I feel that this format didn’t work well for me, for two reasons. First was the fact that I was not able to explain the origins of my work, which I think might have clarified some of the decisions I made; and second, I felt like I was not getting a “pure” response from the people further in the group. By hearing the questions and answers earlier, they had the opportunity to change their view of the work based on what was said. It seemed to make the latter comments a little less like gut reactions and more homogenised.

    If I had this piece to do again, I think there is very little I would change. Now that I know more about the CNC router, I might approach that differently, maybe making the design more complex and cleaning it up a bit more. I  might try to make the design more Norse and less Celtic looking, but the roots of the imagery are similar and their art was severely cross-pollenated, so that could be a losing battle. Overall I think I would create the same basic piece.

    PhilO

    November 15, 2013
    Artwork, Critique, Exhibitions, Misc, School
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