Exploring Kinetic Art....

We have been keeping a blog since 2008. It is a chronological listing of many topics related to Wood that Works. You will find information about sculptures, inspirations, other artists, day to day life in the shop. The topics are many and fascinating.  If you are an avid follower of David's work we encourage you to subscribe to this blog to receive the regular updates.

Thursday
Nov132008

Part 5 - Where do sculpture ideas come from?

 

The changes in part 4 did not excite me. I moved the inner curve line back to its original position and added an outer rim. The thought being "I like the inner circle curve let's try it on the outside."

Much better! I like the way the outer rim confines and defines the spoke pattern while reflecting the secondary motion of the off axis inner circle. This is worth some further exploration.

To continue to part 6: Click here

Wednesday
Nov122008

Part 4 - Where do sculpture ideas come from?

I wanted to explore the motion in the center of the part of the pattern. I made a slight modification to the lines connecting the wheel parts together, sliding one end outward to the end of the spoke. The old lines are shown as dotted and the new ones as blue.

 

The animation above shows the effect of the change. I don't like it. It makes the motion at the center more regular and less interesting.

To continue to part 5: Click here

Tuesday
Nov112008

Part 3 - Where do sculpture ideas come from?

 

The first animation convinced me that this was worth pursuing further. The next step was to add some reality by tying the wheel parts together and adding a simple circular base to hold them to the wall. I redid the wheel drawing in Illustrator and the changes (shown in blue above) were automatically brought into After Effects with the centers aligned.

The difference in the animation is subtle. A new pattern has emerged in the center of the sculpture that overlays the initial pattern. This is what draws my eye now. Note: The blue coloring is only in the drawing to show changes, the animation shows them in the same "wood" color.

To continue to part 4: Click here

Monday
Nov102008

Part 2 - Where do sculpture ideas come from?

 

I do my drawings in Adobe Illustrator. I located the old Pegasus file and copied the part of the wheel that matched the part hanging on the wall. I duplicated and flipped it while guessing at a center rotation point to start with. I created another layer in Illustrator and placed mirror image copy of the test wheel on it. I saved the drawing and opened it in Adobe After Effects. I set the rotation effects so the layers or wheels would rotate in opposite directions with the approximate motion I wanted. This is the initial result. It is very busy but there might be something to work with.

To continue to part 3: Click here

Saturday
Nov082008

Part 1 - Where do sculpture ideas come from?

I'm often asked where I get my ideas. In the following series of blog posts I'm going to detail a recent experience of recursive inspiration. 
Many years ago I threw some damaged sculpture parts into the wood recycle bin at the Ashford transfer station. Several weeks later we were all amused to find these parts displayed in an artful arrangement on the side of a local barn. Recycled art art!
 
Two years ago we repainted the outside of the studio. I had some extra Pegasus parts and decided to follow my neighbor's example by painting and attaching them to the front of the building. End of story I thought. 
Jump forward to the summer of 2008. I walked by the painted parts as I had hundreds of times before but this time it occurred to me that this arrangement might make an interesting patterning wheel to use with my "Focus" type mechanism.
 
I've learned to save good ideas in a way that I'll be reminded of them later. I took a photo of the wall with my trusty iPhone, mailed it to myself, and left it in my mail inbox. This way I keep bumping into the photo when I clean out my inbox. I don't do this all that often so the "bumps" come at random times. I recently discovered the email and photo when I was updating my email notification list for the Falling Water sculpture. That "discovery" started a design sequence that I'm going to detail in the next few posts. They will chronicle the evolution of an idea. Stay tuned!
 

To continue to part 2: Click Here