Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artwork. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 October 2020

Adventures in Graphic Design: The Handmaid's Tale

Is anyone else currently watching [or has watched] The Handmaid's Tale? I started watching a year or so ago but didn't make it to the end of the first episode. Way too grim for me. I'm fine with ghosts, vampires and monsters [because they don't exist]. But anything to do with potential real life horror, I can't take. I know it can and does happen but I don't want to watch it on screen. This story might be fiction but it covers the consequences of catastrophic human error in judgement leading to the establishment of a society built on violence, terror and the perversion of religion in the worst way. This hasn't happened but the potential is there.

However, a few weeks ago my niece began telling me how amazing it was, she admitted it was horrific but, so well written and acted that it made for compelling viewing. So partly out of curiosity and partly because I love having something in common to chat about with my niece, I started watching it again... and it really is quite astounding. At the time of publishing this post, I'm about half way through season three. 

Here's a brief synopsis of the basic premise.

The Handmaid's Tale is the story of life in the dystopia of Gilead, a totalitarian society in what was the United States. Gilead is ruled by a fundamentalist regime that treats women as property of the state, and is faced with environmental disasters and a plummeting birth rate. In a desperate attempt to repopulate a devastated world, the few remaining fertile women are forced into sexual servitude. One of these women, Offred, is determined to survive the terrifying world she lives in, and find the daughter that was taken from her. [IMBD]

One aspect of the story that fascinates me is the colour symbolism of the "uniforms" the Gilead women are forced to wear. The Handmaids [remaining fertile women] wear long red dresses - symbolising menstrual blood and the womb and fire and lust. The Wives wear a teal blue -  associated with the Madonna, and symbolising their ultimate role as mothers, pure mothers, those who have not conceived themselves but rear the children anyway. Marthas are female servants who wear a drab brown uniform symbolising earth and the homestead. 

For further information on colour symbolism in The Handmaid's Tale read this article by Charlotte Unsworth.

My designs are based around this colour representation and I began with basic shapes.


Would you believe I've never made a paper chain before! 

I used this blog post to get me started: Ehow make paper people cut outs

Then I and added text, imagining I was designing a book cover. 

I use both Picassa and GIMP for doing this; Picassa is easier to navigate but GIMP has more functions.


Gilead as a nightmarish place of fear definitely falls within the Halloween related category hence this late October posting. Even the smallest misdemeanor committed there can lead to the severest punishment which is being publically hung "on the wall". 

I played about with this macabre idea too.



Finally, I created a paper chain of Handmaids wearing their distinctive "wings" - a Jacobean styled white wimple. 




As already mentioned above, Gilead society is based on a perversion of the Christian religion.

Religion in the Handmaid's Tale Religion is the foundation of Gilead ’s formation. It is a republic based on religious dogma from the Old Testament skewed cover up the real wishes of the Gilead elite. Their use of Christianity is only a means to an end. There’s never any mention of people willingly praying, going to church, or even using the accepted greetings of their own accord. They do these things out of fear, fear that they will be thrown out of civilization or worse, tortured and killed.

Quote from Women's Literature Blog Religion in The Handmaid's Tale

Handmaid's greet each other by saying "Under His Eye

This link gives a brief explanation on these words:

What does Under His Eye mean in the The Handmaid's Tale

Well there you are, I've had a lot of fun playing around with these concepts and am pretty happy with the results. I'm going to experiment more with text as I love the changes it makes to the images. Off now to watch the remaining few episodes of season three... in the last episode I watched, things weren't looking very good for Offred... :-)


Publicity 






Book cover art


 









Friday, 29 April 2016

Art in circles

I find a certain harmony that emanates from art placed within a circular shape, and looking at this brief retrospective selection of my work it is something I am clearly drawn to...

Kalli, Bunny and Savage floral collages in gold circle frames [2013]

Floral March bunny collages in gold circle frames [2014]
 
Circles have no beginning or end.
They represent the eternal whole and in every culture are an archetypical form representing the sun, the earth, the moon, the universe, and other celestial objects between.
Circles are used to suggest familiar objects such as wheels, balls, many kinds of fruit.
They suggested well-roundedness and completeness.

"Bees" collection glass and metal double sided pendant [2014]
"Bees" collection metal and glass double sided pendants [2014]
"Bees" collection Melissa gift boxes [2014]
Circles have free movement.
They can roll.
Shading and lines can enhance this sense of movement in circles.
Circles are graceful and their curves are seen as feminine.
They are warm, comforting and give a sense of sensuality and love.
Their movement suggests energy and power. Their completeness suggests the infinite, unity, and harmony.

Magical talisman [July 2012]

Kalli and March bunny collages in gilt fames [2012]
 
Troedyrhiw Christmas angel in her home tin [2015]
 
Scull motif decorated vintage specimen box photographed against matching background
 
Circles protect, they endure, they restrict.
They confine what’s within and keep things out.
They offer safety and connection.
Circles suggests community, integrity, and perfection.
Because they are less common in design they work well to attract attention, provide emphasis, and set things apart.

Floral scull hanging circle postcards

Madonna of the roses hanging postcard [2013]

Affirmation hanging postcard [2013]

Decorated tins [2015]

"Nature's Almanac" decorated tin lid [2015]

"Savage" brooch [2013]

"Scull" brooch [2013]

"Dolly" brooch [2013]

"Alice" collage as mobile upload [2014 no filter]
"Alice" collage as mobile upload [2014 vintage filter]
"Alice" collage as mobile upload [2014 ghost filter]

How I wish that the beautifully composed circle definitions in this post were written by me, but they were in fact taken from this website: http://vanseodesign.com/web-design/visual-grammar-shapes/

Celebration art work

"Seventy"
[Mayfifth1935 Designs collage March 2015]

 "Jude's Fifty Roses"
[Mayfifth1935 Designs collage February 2014]
 
"Power of Three"
[framed collage for Jude 2013]

 
Heidi's Heart
[Mayfifth1935 Designs collage October 2011]
  
Hanna's 20th [framed collage May 2011]

New baby [framed collage April 2011]
 

 
 

Saturday, 9 April 2016

Damsels


"Rapture"
[print from an original collage] 

"Frenzy"
 [print from an original collage]
 
 Damsel labels
 
Damsel labels 
 
Scan of original "Rapture" collage
 
Scan of original "Frenzy" collage

 
Scan of original "Chaos" collage
 
The Williams Sisters [Bess]

The Williams Sisters [Ella]

Scull with daisies


Persephone

Hecate [with orchids]

Andromeda
 
Damsel discs templates
 
 
 
All of the above are, or are from, original collages by Mayfifth1935