actually, I rather like the 'diagrammatic' aesthetic here; it reminds me of the mark-making that surgeons do on patients' faces before they commence plastic surgery - a sort of 'road map' of potential change - a route to transformation; I like the notion that you're deconstructing your identity and annotating it; perhaps this is something that might provide the basis for your final portrait?
Well I liked the idea that the identity is constructed from litle particles, like tree is formed out of leafes. But now I'm concerned if the final portrait would express that or rather it looked like a very detailed "mess".
actually, I rather like the 'diagrammatic' aesthetic here; it reminds me of the mark-making that surgeons do on patients' faces before they commence plastic surgery - a sort of 'road map' of potential change - a route to transformation; I like the notion that you're deconstructing your identity and annotating it; perhaps this is something that might provide the basis for your final portrait?
ReplyDeletesee below
http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/dv1958013/Digital-Vision
Well I liked the idea that the identity is constructed from litle particles, like tree is formed out of leafes. But now I'm concerned if the final portrait would express that or rather it looked like a very detailed "mess".
ReplyDeleteReally like the idea...
ReplyDeleteand the quote
"the identity is constructed from litle particles, like tree is formed out of leafes" is so true in many ways
Check Chuck Close, he is famous by painting portraits divided by tiny little squares
http://blog.lib.umn.edu/peza0001/arts1001wednesdays/Chuck%20Close%201997.jpg
wow, thanks alot, you keep on being very helpful to me, appreciate it :)
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