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City pots.....as two worlds collide.

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"I’m on the ferry and we are slowly winding through a narrow pass between the Gulf Islands off of Vancouver BC. The shoreline is dark, rich and green with trees, grasses and rocks. Sometimes deer graze by the trees. It feels wilder here by the shore even though I can see many houses with trails of smoke rising and lazily drifting upwards. I watch a few gulls play over the water. Suddenly an airplane screams and bullies it’s way down an invisible path over the dull roar of this ferry boat. Two worlds collide. Cities are built right on top of lands like this, it could happen right here, one building at a time until we have to build parks to see the grass again. I speak about that juxtaposition and balance between city life and wild life using a rich dark chocolate-red clay painted with earthy tones of terra sigillata pigmented clay slips. Wild beasts, birds and circus-like figures juggle topsy turvy and fly helter skelter under tall colourful crowns of city dwellings. Open windows glow from sunlight by day and candlelight by night."                                                                                                                                     ~ Nancy Walker  

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Skyline - an outline of land and buildings defined against the sky.

Cityscape - a city viewed as a scene - an artistic representation of a city

 

Sketchbook Research

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Juxtaposition - an image-development strategy used to place, side by side, two or more images or elements in a way that changes the meaning or effect of each.

Simplification - an image-development strategy whereby an image is made less complex by the elimination of details.

 

Working across two adjacent pages in your sketchbook create TWO different design ideas. 

 

For each design idea;         

  1. Draw a simplified, original design of the cityscape that will become the top part of your vessel, all details must be line. Make sure that your design has a clear definition between the buildings and the sky. Remember to think about structure. 

  2. Draw the extensions – extensions should relate to the cityscape created in some way - think humour. 

  3. Draw one large element (shape) on the lower half of your design that is inspired by nature. â€‹

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