Monday 26 May 2014

Final major project evaluation.



My final major project theme is japan. I decided to do japan for my final major project because I am very interested in their traditions and art. I started researching into japan but not concentration on my subject of japan, but when I came across a images of a Japanese tea house I realized that I wanted to look mostly into tea houses and their geishas, but also native Japanese plants, as they are used greatly in Japanese interior design. And I chose to create a kimono as my final piece, but a very simple but effective.
To start collection secondary research about japan I used the web page https://gb.pinterest.com/ to gather images and ''pin'' them onto my account. I used these images throughout my project to create my sheet work and my sketchbook. To collect my primary research I went to the Leeds royal armory where they had a section on traditional Japanese armor, which worked well for my as I was looking mainly into traditional Japanese art.
I pieced together my research onto A2 mood boards, which I then used to create 2 visual sheets where I developed the images on my mood boards into my own images and patterns. From these visual sheets I created three development sheets. On each of my development sheets I used a different plant as my focus.
I decided to use my cherry blossom development sheet to create my final design as I thought my other two ideas had too much block color, and my cherry blossom idea was more delicate and interesting.
originally I wanted to make my kimono from heavy silk, but when I added up the cost of how many meters of heavy silk I’d need, I realized that I didn’t have enough money to make it from heavy silk. So I had to decide to make my kimono out of silk, even though this is not traditionally the correct material to use.
In the project I experimented by doing a piece of fabric making, which is where you create fabric out of strips of different fabrics by sewing them together.
Throughout this project I have en-counted a few problems the main one being money, but to solve this I simply used the cheapest fabric, which Is cotton, rather than using silks or satins, even though this held me back on the amount of experimentation I could do when doing my samples, also it meant that I couldn’t make my kimono out of heavy silk like I wanted to. Also while trying to do my blog, I was unable to upload photographs of my work, which has affected my blog greatly.
If I had no time constraints I would have made a traditional kimono out of heavy silk and created a design that would have covered the whole of the kimono rather than just the bottom half and the sleeves.
Throughout this project I have been looking at the Japanese painter and wood cut artist, Hokusai. I found his work useful in my project because I was looking at traditional Japanese art, and Hokusai’s work is a large part of traditional Japanese art and is largely recognized all over the world.
I think what went well in this project was my sheet work and the final design I developed from them. What didn’t go so well was the my lack of money which resulted in me not being able to use the correct material, and also I would have like to do a lot more work into my sketchbook. So overall I could have used my time a little bit better and concentrated a little more on my sketchbook.
Originally in my project proposal I wrote I wanted to study mainly into plant and tea room interior, to create a set of floor pillows for a tea room, but I was then told I should push myself and create a kimono which was a good coincidence as I had just started looking into geishas. I found this project a little more challenging as past projects because of the amount and size of work, also I didn’t structure my time properly so I had a lot of work to do all at once, but as an overall I really enjoyed this project and its outcomes.