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Artist - Bill Woodrow materials found in dumps, side of the street, car lots, scrap yards, etc. used different items like cars and refrigerators cutting portions but keeping the original shape so it can still be discerned, see the twin tub below, however i find this flawed in that I cannot recognise this as a washing machine, technology has changed since it was made, in the future his work may have less and less meaning to those who look at it. does it still hold value when we can no longer relate or identify the form? Twin-Tub with Guitar 1981 rock and roll machine as its a washing machine and a guitar! Tate Bill Woodrow’s raw materials are familiar, domestic objects collected from the streets and junk yards in his neighbourhood. In the early 1980s he began giving them new meanings by peeling back their outer casing to form new objects. brings together two symbols of Western consumerism. Woodrow explained ‘The guitar was a pop icon and the washing machine was an everyd...
Corvid-19 - Its affect on my art repurposing the materials and item how materials and tools change my process materials I find outside on dog walks, so far branches and leafy plants I have bought other plants from the supermarket that I am currently growing Mind distracted hard to focus at home depressed from not seeing people as often need to speak to tutor about if i'm doing enough for blog, what i need to improve upon, finding it hard to keep up, not sure if heading in right direction feel like im focusing too much on one area, should be more broad and working faster. backgrounds what walls to use, how to make them suit my needs, what i will adjust to make my work better suit my environment stepladder isolated lack of input from peers materials workshops I would have liked to have utilised the 3D workshop at uni, and having such short notice of the school closing left me unsure of what materials i may want to use and what even was available, to buy ra...


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