Saturday 26 September 2015

South India: November Brief: Context

I will be mainly staying in Thiruvananthapuram (pop 800,000), with a tradition dating back to 1000BC. It lies on a small strip of land with plenty of coconut & palm trees, and it name means "City of Lord Anantha" (the serpent on which Lord Padmanabha/Vishnu reclines) in Sanskrit and Malayalam. It was a trading post for spices, sandalwood and ivory. Thiruvananthapuram is the Largest City in Kerala.The city is the state capital and houses many central and state government offices, organizations and companies. Apart from being the political nerve centre of Kerala, it is also a major academic hub and is home to several educational institutions including the University of Kerala, and to many science and technology institutions.

HISTORY

Thiruvananthapuram is one of the oldest cities in India, with periodic references in many Greek and Roman literatures. However the city's position came forefront when the Venad Dynasty came into power of Southern regions, after the Great Partition of Kerala Empire of Cheras in 14th century. Though Venad rulers had their capital at Kollam (70kms north of Thiruvananthapuram), the town was well considered as a major trading centre. The rise of new Venad King, Maharaja Marthanada Varma and subsequently formation of Travancore Kingdom in late 17th century proved a turning point for the city. The Raja, after formation of the kingdom by annexing many small states and feudal principalites, dedicated the entire kingdom to Lord Padmanabha, the presiding deity of Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple and crowned as Emperor, making the royal family to rule in the name of the lord. This resulted in making Thiruvananthapuram as the capital of new kingdom and the city started growing around the temple. In 19th century, the entire administration was brought to Thiruvananthapuram city from the Royal headquarters of Sree Padmanabhapuram Fort (50kms from Thiruvananthapuram city), which marked completion of first phase of Thiruvananthapuram city.
Travancore was one of the most powerful Indian Princely state during British Raj, with the kingdom becoming 3rd richest state among native states. Thiruvananthapuram city, under the royal patronage grew into a major academic, cultural hub of India, with many firsts to its credit. The Maharajas always cared to keep their capital, one of the most greenest cities in India, which resulted in many praises for the capital. As the power and wealth of Travancore Kingdom reached its peak during early 20th century, Thiruvananthapuram became a major prosperous city. With independence of India, the Travancore chose to ascend into India Union. After formation of Kerala state in 1957, it was decided to retain Thiruvananthapuram as the capital city.
Being a capital and administrative city, it remains to be one of the hottest political center in Kerala. The 3rd phase of the development came in early 1990s, when Kerala Government decided to establish Technopark- a large IT Park. The growth of Technopark as the largest Information Technology park in South Asia, made a major impetus for the growth of city. Today the city is on focus of making it as major IT/Bio-Technology hub.
The arterial road of Thiruvananthapuram is the 'MG Road' or the Mahatma Gandhi Road which lies in the north-south direction and connects almost all important attractions in the city.

CLIMATE
The city has a tropical climate and therefore does not experience distinct seasons. The mean maximum temperature is 34°C and the mean minimum temperature is 21°C. Humidity is high, and rises to about 90% during the monsoon season.
Thiruvananthapuram is the first city along the path of the south-west monsoon and gets its first showers in early June. However, pre-monsoon showers are common in April and May, accounting to about 35 cm on average. Annual rainfall is not very high compared to other districts of Kerala, but it is still a substantial 180 cm. The rainiest months are May, June, July, August, and October, but there are frequent showers in other months too between April and November. For travelers who wish to avoid the rain, the best period to visit is from December to March.
The winter temperature comes down to about 18°C at some places at high altitudes and summer temperatures can sometimes go as high as 35°C.

TALK

The native language of Kerala is Malayalam, which is a Dravidian language like Tamil, Kannada or Telugu. Most educated locals are also able to communicate in Hindi and English. The people are generally very helpful and friendly. Tamil is generally understood, though people may not be too fluent in the language.



South India: November Brief

As I am travelling to India for 2 weeks at the beginning of November I thought it would be a great place to do some reportage illustration. I also want to continue my COP research into animal symbolism as animal imagery is a huge influence in the religions, art and daily life there. I also want to look at the lifestyle of Yoga, as I am staying in the 'home of yoga', as a healing therapy and a part of daily life. I want to investigate balance, the movement of the body and also the animal symbolism in this such as the position 'downward dog'.

I will be taking a range of sketchbook sizes so that I have a large one to capture details/landscapes etc on, when I have a bit of time to really work on them. But I also want to take a small pocket size one so that I can do sketching from life from particular moments/objects that stand out to me whilst occupied with something else. E.g. on the bus etc.

Brief 1: Reportage Illustration
Task: Report on what I see and find here. Use my sketchbook to interpret ideas and cultural activities that shock me or that comfort me. Whats different about their culture, whats the same? What surprises me and what is stereotypical e.g. mobile phones etc vs beautiful landscape. In my sketchbooks I will be experimenting with close ups, and full landscapes reporting on the area, also rubbings/media use as scrap book of my visit - get scraps of material/leaves etc if possible to add depth and a tactile aspect to my sketchbook pages.
Outcome: At least one sketchbook. Once back in England can pick my favourite pages and print them in a zine or recreate them in a small book of my time in India.

Brief 2: Animal Symbolism
Task: Research into, and use your sketchbook, the role of animals in this culture and how they impact on daily life and are thought of on a grander scale - prayed to etc/ sacrifice.
Outcome: Written research about the role of animal symbolism in the area/culture. Sketchbook pages looking into the element of animals in their culture - physically e.g. working alongside them, wild life and for meat etc, and then spiritually - gods, statues and imaginary scenes with the animal watching over them etc... be imaginative to reflect the spiritual side!

Brief 3: Home of Yoga
Task: How does yoga use animal imagery and why/what do they use this to symbolise. Yoga as a part of daily life and its impact on the culture.
Outcome: Sketchbook focused around yoga and its benefits and role in daily life in the area and culture. Life drawings to show the balance, movement of the body and flow of energy. - Fire/water/air/earth elements etc.

Research:
http://wikitravel.org/en/Thiruvananthapuram
http://www.southindianarts.in/

September Briefs: Sunday Morning Blogger Feature

I really want to start doing some quick weekly blog posts about current relevant topics, particularly focussing on fashion illustration. This is not 100% the road I want to go down but it is definitely something I love and have a massive interest for in my personal life (I may not dress fashionably but I love the art form, the design, and the theatrics involved!)

Here is one artist I looked at on my Tumblr which really inspires me to create some spontaneous and quick sketches to capture the fashion world using a colourful media -one that I don't use enough of - coloured crayon/pencil.

http://awaspinawig.tumblr.com/post/129916925065/damien-cuypers-lfw-illustrations-as-part-of-his

I was thinking of using this idea for some of my Studio Practice self set briefs... perhaps featuring a blogger (fashion/beauty/baking etc) on my own Tumblr every Sunday (for example). I would create a few quick illustrations for them based on their own photos from their blogs/instagrams and then do a small section on why I really like them, why they inspire me or why they inspire others etc! I thought this would be a really good idea for me as I do this anyway I just don't write it down! It would be a good platform to build up for collaborations as well if I could draw their attention to my work and they could be a great promotional tool! This generation uses social media to really empower individuals and self set up businesses to get a fan base and loyal customers etc or to just get your name out!

I am constantly inspired on apps such as Instagram and follow loads of individuals and brands that I absolutely love! I always am seeing things that I want to interpret through drawing so this would be a great opportunity for me to do this. If I set myself a saturday or sunday morning -say 8am till 12pm to research, draw and write up the blog post it means I can do it often and reliably and practice sticking to a schedule and time limit regularly. This wouldn't seem like much at the time however over the year it will add up and if I use my Tumblr to create a particular page for this project it means that I can seperate this project into its own social media spot!... drawing in a new audience (that of the bloggers/brands and the bloggers/brands themselves) and it may lead to other opportunities of collaborations with them as they use visual ques on their own social media to entice people to the creativity of their brands etc so they may love some drawn work!... if not it is still something that I will enjoy and won't take too much time away from my other projects if I just focuss one morning a week purely on this particular project!

Saturday 5 September 2015

SEPTEMBER BRIEFS

Identify 6 Briefs/Projects/Contexts that I want to explore as part of Level 6 Studio Practice Blog.

Include at least 3 live/competition briefs or projects in your selection.

  • Develop a focused practice with a breadth of possible outcomes. 
  • Use existing competition briefs as a starting point and work out how you could develop a more comprehensive response. 
  • Themes, subjects, content, formats and processes that you want to explore. 
  • Initial ideas
  • Concepts
  • Research
  • Thumbnails
  • ^ These will all help me to identify what I can do with the briefs and why
  •  Write a short (100 word) summery for each brief explaining why you have chosen it and what you intend to do with it. 
  • Maternal Health Leaflet Project
  • Jasmines Zine - Vagina Dentata 
  • Lone.Rascal fashion illustrations