Thursday, September 22, 2016

Emma Foss Project 1

       When prompted to create a self portrait, I began to think about the essence of portraiture and what it historically has meant. Portraiture, at the beginning of time was to document a person as realistically as possible in order to have a historical account of their existence. As art began to fluctuate, artists, when drawing the self, began to add other elements into their work which implied something more than their external appearance. They utilized their personal style and the emotive qualities that can be created through the handling of materials to make a commentary on themselves. As I thought of all of the aesthetically pleasing portraits and nudes I have seen in my life, I began to realize like most things in life that they may not portray the whole truth of how the artist sees themselves or how others see the artist.

       I began to think of how I see myself versus how other see me and realized these things were vastly different. But both views are equally valid. As I wear large quantities of makeup every day and try to take care of my appearance, most people generally tell me that I am an attractive individual with admirable traits. Whether or not this is what they truly think is a matter of its own and something I may never know but I’d like to think this may be true. Not paying attention and being too self-absorbed makes people less keen in noticing flaws. However, when I think of myself, all I can see is my acne. It’s all I can think about, it’s all I assume others see about me, it blurs all of my realities and toys with my emotions and self-perceptions. I’ve had chronic cystic acne for about eight years now and has become more of my identity than anything else. I never let anyone, even my close friends, see me without makeup so it is not a part of my identify that most people associate with. But to me, it is me, it is everything and it is what defines me. However, the way I look all day and my “natural self” are both equally valid portrayals of who I am and I think it is so interesting that we put such an emphasis on being “yourself” and “natural” when my identity of makeup is just as much me as my bare face. Makeup is a ritual for me and just as much a part of my life as my acne. I don’t want to deny what I truly look like but I also do not want to devalue the person I have created externally as not a valid form of myself.


       I chose to do a painting of myself with three heads because I was trying to discuss the idea of the internal self, how others see you, and the blind inability to see both. These three fighting components influence each other and are ultimately what becomes who you are. I was also beginning to think about famous females who exist in groups of three and complement each other. The Goddess Shiva, for example, has three heads and is a very significant figure within Hinduism. I have been dying to try some work with wax, so I did some experimenting with this piece and candle wax. I attained several shades of bodily colors and experimented by dripping them onto the paper to represent acne and infection. I loved how they stand off the paper because to me it represents the projection and externalization of our largest insecurities. The actual weight of the wax weighs the paper down, much like an insecurity does to any given person. I did the nude in watercolor because I felt it mimicked the translucency of the wax and still looks pristine in contrast to the wax’s lumpy nature. In the background, I did subtle washes of purple and blue to reference the haze of self-perception, as well as defining the figure in the middle. I chose to pose my body in a fashion that seemed to expose a lot of skin because I wanted to show as much damage as possible. I also wanted it to be a pose that showed motion and gave off a tumultuous essence, in the act of balancing. With all of these thoughts in mind, my piece definitely did not turn out how I anticipated. I would love to expand these ideas in the future and get to know the medium of wax better.


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