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Before the Nørrebro Åben By openstreetmapping workshop, this is what the map of the area looked like.
Mapping the polar regions of our Earth is vital to understanding these beautiful but fragile ecosystems. Photo: Claire Porter
OSHA and Hazard Mapping classes facilitated by Jack Angel, Nathan Maynard and Warren Rasmussen, mid-July 2014 in Carlsband, N.M.
In this portfolio I'm showing my current work, a project that I started less than a week ago. This project is in group, we had to come up with a theme together but develop it alone, and then make a presentation in group.
First we started it by picking words of interest, until we reached e few common ones. We select one of these main words : Light. From there I expanded for Movement, Light and Shadow.
I started my research, and the artist that I found more helpful for me were Edward Muybridge, Christian Boltanski, the Shadow Catches Exhibition in the V&A and a Photographer named Nir Arieli, for his the Tension project.
After that I just started to sketch and to imagine in my mind final outcomes, how to do the presentation, if I wanna to paint or build.
This Idea appear in my head and I made it my final one. The goal is to do a painting of a woman, freeze in time, with her movement stopped and unfinished. Then, project into the painting the continuation of that movement like a dream, like we could see inside her memories. The paint will be in black and white, because the only way we can see is when the light reveals the dark. And thats the most natural way to present it.
Extracting soil samples, such as this one, is an integral part of the team's work at Toolik Field Station. Once they've gathered enough samples, the team will return to their lab where they will measure the hydraulic properties using a tool called KSAT.
OSHA and Hazard Mapping classes facilitated by Jack Angel, Nathan Maynard and Warren Rasmussen, mid-July 2014 in Carlsband, N.M.
Cartographer Matt Dooley, professor of Geography and Geographic Information Science, creates gunpowder maps of rivers using a paper stencil, paper, plywood and gunpowder. When the gunpowder ignites, it leaves dramatic marks on the paper below.
photos by Kathy M Helgeson Research: Our Polluted Waterways: A Gunpowder Mapping Project