Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

6.01.2012

Senior Thesis

I just wanted to post a few photos from my senior thesis exhibition. It was a great learning experience, but I'm glad it's over! It was about places from my childhood and how they've changed since then.









10.01.2011

a l o n e by Mikko Lagerstedt


For the rest of the series, go here:
http://www.behance.net/gallery/a-l-o-n-e/956235

6.13.2011

Pottery


I have always loved hand-thrown pottery. There's just something so warm and personal about each piece. Last summer, I decided to take a pottery class at Genesee Center for the Arts. I've always wanted to try throwing my own pottery, and it was just as awesome as I'd hoped.

It was HARD. I was expecting to come out of the class with misshapen lumps of clay, but the instructor was really helpful and managed to coax great work out of everyone. I LOVE the pottery I made in that class, and I use a lot of it on a daily basis. My dad just bought a kiln to supplement the pottery wheel he bought a few years ago, and I'm excited to try it again!

Here are some other pieces I made:







7.08.2010

Henna

Last weekend was my first festival of the year! I have been doing henna body art at festivals for about 6 years now. It is very profitable and was a nice break from my day job. I missed Shea, who was at the AOS MiniCon, but I didn't really have a whole lot of time to think about that.

I started doing henna when I was 14 after getting some at a girl scouting event. My dad bought me a kit, and I played around with it and decided I really liked it. I bought more and did henna for my family at a reunion. Then my parents sugguested I set up a booth at a small local festival. I ended up making a ton of money, so I got a DBA and a tax ID at the age of 15, and have been doing henna ever since at several festivals a summer.

My first booth was outfitted with a small paper sign and some designs glued to a wooden board. I had camp chairs and a table. I have redecorated considerably since that first summer:
The chairs are actually storage crates with wooden reinforcements and cushions attached (made by my grandmother).

Here is my booth at the Batavia Picnic in the Park from last weekend:


I have a new tent this year. My other one was five years old and pretty mangled. 

This festival listed their hours as noon to five. I was working straight from 11:30-5:30! I wish I'd had time to take more pictures, because I'm really proud of the work I did. Here is a small sample mostly taken to show the customers what their henna looked like if it was in a hard-to-see place, with a few practice designs I did on myself.















One of my photographer friends stopped by and took a photo too: http://www.flickr.com/photos/48741272@N03/4762135955/

I have some more photos from previous years on my website: www.phoenixhenna.com

It's back-breaking, thumb-numbing work, but I enjoy it and I make about the same in 5 hours that I get for a week at my other job.