Thursday, March 26, 2026

Bethany - Materialistic

March 26

This week I finally tested out my templates to make sure all my conversions were correct. This was a good choice because one of my templates was measured wrong and I switched up which square size was for what. After some trouble shooting, I fixed all my measurements, and I’m ready to start cutting out fabric.


I also got to go to the international quilt museum in Lincoln, NE and see one of the installations from earlier in my blog by Racheal Hayes. I didn’t know that was going to be there, so I was very excited. I got to see how it was installed and how it was sewn because it’s visible from multiple levels of the building.



 

March 12

Edited materials list:

Cut wood, Mp3 player,


White crystal organza fabric 18 yards - est $50

        o   https://fabricwholesaledirect.com/products/crystal-organza-59-60-inch-fabric

Fishing wire to hang panels= est. $6

https://www.amazon.com/Fishing-Acejoz-Invisible-Hanging-Supports/dp/B08KZPHDPY/ref=sr_1_3_sspa?crid=3Q5PBPY4N9CQ6&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.-N2ir471lhmfcFyk1-4zJCazpc0sSmXb0tx5rbuseDmcghaBV-RdGpEpq1kCpR5CoBG_-sO46HUABp9RsK5JRyzdqwu4dy6uzCRufmp2SXjDJn9SLygRPqwvyDp2it-qtqYKXSkV9yZOSLHWMYPRlMHIOR4xDw7A0r8XdlrTG05MV9n-31RNhIuzglguDN0Mb2zXyeksF3sAV3KpfpQzxoOyVkF6cAJnPz4eixvkzsDz_plwBu_fEU6RPq0BOl3B96q67uFw738luUIa_JPkyghv_r7D3BMCwpMoPqpZK6E.Ohl7Txsk6kUDja23wEuuIDO0smFxDASglBihG4el7Io&dib_tag=se&keywords=fishing+line&qid=1773336218&sprefix=Fish%2Caps%2C202&sr=8-3-spons&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9hdGY&psc=1

 Correct needle for fabric type $8.88

        oamazon.com


March 2

I didn’t get to work as much this week so I don’t have as much to report, but I got a few things done. First, I looked through my excel sheet to figure out the conversion factor for the individual pieces I will need to cut out for the pattern. I had a funky number, so I rounded a bit. Then, I cut out cardboard guides for each of the pieces. I cut out fabric from that to double check that everything is right, but I haven’t had the chance to sew it up yet. If I need to edit the size of the guides I can do that after I sew it up. I  I think I will cover the edges of the cardboard with tape before using them for cutting.

I think I may need a new blade for my rotary cutter, too. It was not cutting very well on my mock ups. 

I’m worried I may not have enough to fill the space based on my number of houses. I am considering having just blank fabric hanging in between if needed to bulk the fabric use up.


Feb 19

This week, I made four sewing mock-ups to settle on a pattern and figure out how much fabric I would need.


First, I used this pattern. I unfortunately lost this sample, but I learned a lot of issues with sewing this type of fabric. I also wanted to make a bigger version to see if that made things easier.





Next, I made the no-seam version of the pattern twice as big. I used a flat-felled seam so there wouldn’t be a raw side. I thought I would like this better, but I found it really difficult to make straight lines and I actually liked the raw side more. I also realized with this version that the lines look strange without color.



Then, I decided to try just stitching the house shape. This was surprisingly hard to do, and it looks a little cartoony. It would be a good back up, but I don’t like it as much.


Finally, I modified the original pattern to have no door and instead be a narrower house exterior. My cutting tool was struggling at this point, so it is messier than I would like, but the pattern works. I would make sure to line everything up better on the final project.



This is the sample that I landed on. I want to make it about twice as big for the final project. My resident engineer helped me convert all the sizes to find how much fabric I will need to make them all about 24” in width. This will also make it so fewer houses will take up more area. I will sew them together vertically and I might clean up the sides once finished. I actually like having the insides have raw edges because I think it contributes to the concept.

Installation plan + written statement

Written statement:

I want to make a ghost-like neighborhood of houses that the viewer can walk through and peer through. By using panels of sheer fabric, I will quilt vertical lines of houses that will be suspended in the room. Faint sounds of a breeze can be heard as you enter. We all have our own associations of what a house signifies. I want viewer to think: Is this place abandoned? am I partaking in surveillance? Is this a dream? The space is rather narrow, so one may have to push past the fabric to walk through the room. I hope the translucent fabric will be combined with the volume and layout will make the room simultaneously full and empty, open and claustrophobic.

Installation plan:

There will be two rows of panels in squares hung from the ceiling. The inside square will be hung on the grid inside the lighting lines. The outside square will hang from the grid on the outside of the lights. The inside row will have one panel on each side, and the outside row will have three panels each. Each panel will have 3 houses each with each house block being about 24 inches wide. This will make 12 panels total with 36 houses total. Ideally, they will hang about three feet off the ground. The lights will point down at a slight angle towards the center of the room. There will be a speaker playing faint sounds of wind and road noise near the entrance.


Viewer encounter strategy:

I want to the room to be feel close together. The viewer will have to weave through the fabric to walk through the room.


Materials list:

·      White crystal organza fabric 13 yards - $34.98 before taxes and shipping

        o   https://fabricwholesaledirect.com/products/crystal-organza-59-60-inch-fabric

·      Dowel rods to hang top of fabric on $4.20*

        o   woodpeckerscrafts.com

        o   *I am unsure if this is the best way to hang them

·      Fishing wire to hang panels= est. $6

·      White sewing thread =est. $6

·      Some type of speaker/mp3 player for sound

·      Correct needle for fabric type $8.88

        oamazon.com

 

You have done something important: they’ve tested, edited, and landed on a direction. That alone is growth.

First: I’m impressed by the amount of material testing you have done- well done. Four mock-ups is real process, not guessing. You learned from each version, and that shows in the final decision. The shift toward the narrower house without the door is a smart edit — it simplifies the form and removes narrative cliché.

The raw edges are not a flaw. In this context, they actually support the concept. The houses are ghost-like, permeable, slightly unresolved. A perfectly finished edge might contradict that.

Now let’s refine.

Concept

The strongest part of this proposal is the tension between:

  • Neighborhood (familiar, domestic, communal)

  • Sheerness (exposure, permeability)

  • Surveillance / insecurity / dream-state

  • Full yet empty

That’s sophisticated.

The “ghost-like neighborhood” is working.

Be careful not to over-explain it in the written statement. The power lies in ambiguity. Let the viewer decide whether they are:

  • Walking through memory

  • Trespassing

  • Being watched

  • Or simply drifting

You don’t need to spell out every interpretive option.


Installation Plan

The two-square layout (inner + outer) is smart. It creates:

  • Compression

  • Navigation

  • Centered stillness

Make sure the spacing is tight enough that the viewer must gently push the panels aside. That physical interaction is crucial.

Three feet off the ground is good — it avoids draping but keeps it architectural.

Lighting angled slightly inward is also strong. You want shadows to layer and double the houses on surrounding walls.

One suggestion:
Test how sheer the organza actually is under your gallery lighting. Too sheer and the house shapes disappear. Too opaque and the ghost effect is lost.


Quilting vs Drawing

Quilting gives material presence.
Drawing gives subtlety and speed.

Given your timeline and 36 houses total, be realistic.

If quilting all 36 will compromise installation time, consider:

  • Quilt the inner square.

  • Draw or stitch-outline the outer square.

Hierarchy could strengthen the space.


Sound

Wind is good — but subtle.

Avoid anything cinematic or dramatic.
No howling.
No heavy storm.

A faint ambient exterior tone is enough.

The sound should almost be questioned — not obvious.


Materials / Hanging

Dowel rods are fine structurally, but make sure they don’t visually dominate.

If the dowels read too much, consider:

  • Thin steel rods

  • Or tensioned line with reinforced hem

Fishing line could work — just ensure knots are secure and level.


What’s Working Conceptually

This installation understands:

  • Material restraint

  • Repetition

  • Architectural activation

  • Emotional ambiguity

It’s not sentimental.
It’s not literal.
It’s spatial.

That’s a big leap.


I’m very pleased with how much testing you’ve done. The refinement of the house pattern shows real decision-making. The ghost-like neighborhood concept is strong, especially paired with sheer fabric and spatial compression.

Keep the ambiguity — don’t over-explain the themes in your statement. Let the room do the work.

Be realistic about quilting time. If needed, mix techniques to maintain installation quality.

Make sure the panels are close enough that viewers must negotiate them physically — that tension is key.


Bethany, you are operating at a higher level now. This reads like someone thinking in space, not object.



Feb 16

I’ve been doing a lot of thinking on my installation. I want play off of my first idea with the sheer sheets in a cube combined with the sheer quilts. My idea is to make several quilted panels hung in two squares, and inner and an outer, with houses quilted on them. I want it to have the look of a neighborhood with houses in a line. The viewer would be able to walk through the panels and stand in the middle. I would hope that the sheer fabric will create some dim shadows across the room.

This is different than my other ideas, but I think it hits more on the materiality that I was wanting to work with while also having a theme that I can latch onto better. I have been thinking a lot about families and the state of our nation. I think the imagery of houses is very relevant, especially houses that can be seen through. I think this can convey themes of surveillance, insecurity, weakness, maybe even a dream-state.  Also, I think using this simple sign of a house will let the viewer apply their own feelings onto the room. I want it to be a little eerie; the houses are ghost-like.



The panels would be white voile or organza fabric, most likely. This would give a sheer look, but stiff enough to not drape too much. Rachel Hayes uses shimmer organza in her quilts. I am a little worried about quilting that many squares. It will help that it is all the same pattern, so most of the work is cutting out the pieces. Alternatively, I could draw on the houses with a very light color. It is most important that the outline of the house is present, but faint. I don’t want the outline of the houses to overpower the room. Each panel has three to five houses on it (maybe 5-6 feet long), hangs from the ceiling, and stops around hip/thigh height for the average height viewer. I also would like there to be a sound element to this room. I was thinking of a faint breeze/wind sound or ambient outdoors sounds.  

Feb 9

I thought more about this project, and I’m still struggling with a direction. I went through my fabric and found some sheer panels that are pretty. I also found an artist that makes large transparent quilts named Wally Dion. He will often layer them  in a room so you look through them all. Rachel Hayes does a similar thing, but on a larger scale. It looks like they both use a sewing technique where you fold and sew the seams so there is only one layer of fabric and no backing needed.

Rachel Hayes

Wally Dillon

I think at the core of my ideas, I want to use fabric and light to enhance the room, but I am not sure how to do that well. I have some fabric that I could try experimenting with. I think I’m just at a little bit of a conceptual roadblock. I think I am mostly struggling with how to adapt the space. What do I want the overall experience to be like? 
I think that visually I like my first idea better, but it is lacking conceptually. The sheer quilting could add context to the sheer panels, but I’m still struggling to clarify my ideas overall.


Jan 30

I have been struggling to pin down an idea for the materialistic assignment. My first idea is called “The World Needs More Cowgirls.”

So far, my idea revolves around being a woman in Wyoming. I want to talk about the women who have had an impact on our country from Wyoming as well as the experiences of women here.

 There would be a cowboy hat in the center of the room that is obstructed by sheer fabric and covered in quilted fabric. I am not sure if I would like this fabric to have something painted on it or instead do long paper-cut designs like lace. Either way, I would like the fabric to tone the room and cast shadows in some way. The hat would be on a stand with fabric coming out from underneath that falls into a sort of puddle. This fabric would have names of women from Wyoming. Guests would be invited to write a name of an impactful woman in their life on a scrap of fabric and add it to the pile. I would like to have a speaker inside the cowboy hat with voices of woman talking about their experiences.



I want the room to feel pretty but a little bit unsettling. It should be mostly dark, making the Having the fabric pile grow in the middle signifies the impact of women, but adding to it involves tossing the name of a woman on the ground.I would like to paint on the fabric panels, but I am unsure of what currently. I could write words as well, but that could be too much text. I want there to be obstruction of the hat, so maybe even male forms. I just am struggling to refine this idea as a whole.

My second idea was to make a sort of prayer room. There would be birds and flowers from the ceiling and bean bag chairs around the sides. I would also like panels that have psalms written down them. I would like there to be a sound element as well, so I was thinking the audio of breathing. There could be some sort of dish that people can write and leave a prayer. The lighting would hopefully cast shadows on the walls.


Bethany,

I want to start by saying how much your thinking has matured over the semester. Looking back at your early ideas — the cowboy hat, the prayer room, layered symbolism — you were searching for a way into the material. What you’ve landed on with the sheer quilted houses is much more focused and spatially intelligent.

The ghost-like neighborhood is strong. The repetition of a simple house form paired with translucent fabric creates exactly the kind of tension you’re describing — full yet empty, open yet claustrophobic. The fact that the viewer must physically move through the panels is important. That’s where this becomes installation rather than textile display.

A few refinements to consider:

  • Keep the ambiguity. You don’t need to explain surveillance, insecurity, dream-state, and national commentary all at once. Let the space hold that tension without narrating it.

  • Be realistic about quilting all 36 houses. If time becomes an issue, consider mixing techniques (stitched outlines on some, drawn outlines on others) while keeping visual consistency.

  • Test the fabric under actual lighting conditions. The sheerness needs to be calibrated so the house form reads, but doesn’t overpower the space.

  • Make sure the panels are close enough together that viewers must negotiate them physically. That friction is essential.

The raw edges you mentioned -They work. They support the ghost quality. Don’t over-finish something that conceptually benefits from slight vulnerability.

This piece feels materially grounded, spatially aware, and emotionally restrained. That’s a significant step forward from the beginning of the semester.

Let’s finalize spacing and hanging logistics in person so the installation reads as intentional and architectural rather than decorative.


Keeley H – Small World/Miniature Installation

03/26/26

In Progress Updates:

I didn't do much work on this project over spring break, but I'm going to spend the rest of this week and weekend finishing up all the details! I think to make everything clear about what I need to do, I'm going to list all the little tasks I need to complete this piece. 

  • Cut in the peephole or window in the back of the jewelry box
  • Complete the interior walls and floors of the bathroom 
  • Insert a drawer that will remain older and attach a roof to the bathroom to block the view into the bathroom section. 
  • Configure all the lighting for both rooms. 
  • Sew a mattress and blankets for the bed frame
  • Sculpt a toilet, a sink, and a bathtub out of Sculpy and paint. 
  • Create curtains and shower curtains from fabric. 
  • Finish off the little details for all the rooms. 
  • Any finishing touches. 







03/08/26

In Progress Updates:

I spent the last week preparing the interior of the jewelry box for my small world installation. This required a bit of work in the wood shop, but it was a nice change of pace! I cut off the drawers' faces to create the room within the piece, while still keeping the box's original look. I didn't account for the spaces left by the shelving, but I'm planning to make it feel more cohesive and less like an afterthought. There is a small hole in the back of the jewelry box from a music box player that I will use to create the doorway for the secondary peephole in my original sketch. I'm super proud of how this has worked out so far, but it still needs quite a bit of work before I can start on the smaller details. 





I also have had the opportunity to learn more about the laser cutter! This has been so exciting and quite fascinating to work with. I designed these bed frames in Illustrator to the scale I needed for the tiny world installation, but I wasn't totally confident that they would make it through the actual cutting process. They are so tiny! But with some slight tweaks to the power and speed settings, these came out perfectly! I just need to get some gel superglue and put this tiny bed together. I do want to find other things I can make with the laser cutter to gain more experience and make the building process a little easier. 



I began staining some flat sticks to act as a hardwood floor, and I think I want to add a black and white tile floor into the other room within the installation. I want to have the entire jewelry box set up and ready to incorporate all the tiny details I want to include in the room. I also still need to figure out the lighting and how I want that to look. Luckily, I left the top drawer alone to hide all the lighting up there!


01/25/26

Initial Idea and Sketches:

    I was able to find a pretty, nice, and interesting vintage jewelry storage box. Instead of the usual opening at the top of the box, this one comes with a set of drawers. It also has two doors that open. I thought this object was interesting and gave me the most space to work with. In my sketches, I show how I want this object "posed," and it requires a bit of tinkering with the piece's insides. I want to keep the object looking as it originally did, but remove all the wood and excess behind the drawers to use as my gallery space. I will keep the outward faces of the drawers, but add a thin piece of wood or particle board to keep them from moving while still providing support to hold them in place. 

    Jewelry boxes hold precious items and are often quite a private place for both girls and women. I grew up with my mother having a large jewelry box that I remember holding all the tiny and important things. I wasn't allowed to go through it until I was much older and could understand how to treat each object with care. Within my current body of work that is addressing issues of violence against women, I was questioning what a "safe space" could look like after such an experience. Is it truly safe? What would it look like in the aftermath of such a horrible event? To be quite vulnerable in this post, I couldn't even remember much of what it looked like afterward, but I remember what it felt like. 

    I want to be gentle with this piece. As these spaces are hard to come by and are hard to curate after living through sexual violence of any sort. I want it to be dark and fuzzy, symbolizing the body and mind's deregulation after such an ordeal, while also creating a soft, quiet healing space. That is what went into my design choices for the bedroom portion of the mini installation.

    But one other key element I can remember feeling after is the need to scrub, to clean, and the feeling that it will never be enough. So I thought about adding a bathroom. This room is not visible through the drawer's main peephole, which is slightly ajar. I want to place another, more discreet peephole towards the bottom of the box, either on the sides or back, that people must find. The only clue that it exists is from the light coming through the door. (I was very much inspired by the installation at the museum with the door that goes nowhere and the choice to put light behind it) But mine will lead somewhere as long as people are willing to search for it. In the end, this is two separate pieces brought together to add context, since placing both rooms under one title doesn't feel right. Adding an additional title will hint to my audience that there is more to a hidden room. (Titles have always been really important to my work and to me)

Title Ideas: (After reading my book above, lol, any other ideas that feel more impactful to you title-wise, I would love to hear them!)
"Safe Haven"
"Rubbed Raw"


The sketch is quite quick and not necessarily all the way there, but the perspective I chose to draw it in was difficult to configure in 2D space, but I think it will make so much more sense once I get to building each element. I was also thinking that the top drawer of the box could be used to add overhead lighting or other hidden elements like sound or smell!

Artist Inspiration:

Judy Chicago
"Dinner Party"



I have no idea why the image quality on almost all the images availble for the "Dinner Party" installation are coming up so poor on this blog but I added in a link to Judy Chicago's website so that you can view them in a better light (if you want to ). I'm inspired by Judy Chicago because of her themes and imagery. I really enjoy how she utilizes such feminine imagery in a very masculine presentation. Placing a very vulnerable thing in a light of consumption. But not inviting mean to do any of the that because each place mat is given to a powerful or influential women in history. I find inspiration in her ability to put this work out there and let it speak for itself. 


Tracey Emin:
"My Bed"


I first discovered Tracey Emin in Rachel Sailor's class and was immediately drawn to how vulnerable the work was. I find inspiration in the realness of the work. There is nothing tailored here, and it took quite a bit of bravery and ability to have such a vulnerable moment laid bare for the world to witness and then judge. I think there is a bit of that in the idea I want to portray in my work. 

Kara Walker:
"Burning African Village Play Set with Big House and Lynching"
Kara Walker will always be an inspiration to me and my work. She puts out naratives in such a graphic way, both literally and symbolically. There is no sugar coating what is happening, and therefore it is quite abrupt to witness and digest. I find her ability to toe the line between grotesque scenes of brutality while also explaining history to be beautiful and I hope to achieve just a semblance of that in my work. 


Teresa Margolles:

"The Order of the Good Death - Papeles"

"Fourth Plinth"


Teresa Margolles' interest in violence, and death and how that appears in her work are interesting to me, and I find that many of my interests are reflected there. Her background and experience in forensics adds such a different edge to her work that I can't explain. It's graphic but quiet. The audience can put together what is going on or what is being referenced but in a way that is subdued. While some of her pieces are just full on out there. I'm interested in seeing what the balance could be for my work. 


Keeley, thank you for the care and honesty you brought to this post. The jewelry box is a strong and thoughtful found object choice, both physically and conceptually. Its associations with privacy, intimacy, and preciousness align clearly with the questions you are asking about safety, vulnerability, and what remains after violence. Your attention to the object’s existing structure—drawers, doors, thresholds—and your plan to carefully alter the interior while preserving the exterior shows a strong understanding of how a found space can function as a gallery rather than a container.

Your writing makes it clear that you are not interested in spectacle, and that restraint and gentleness are central to this work. The decision to keep the primary room quiet, dark, and soft, and to introduce the second, hidden space through light rather than visibility, feels conceptually grounded. The idea that the viewer must search for the second room mirrors the emotional logic of the piece, and the use of multiple peepholes as thresholds is particularly effective.

I do want to encourage you to think carefully about scope and necessity as you move forward. You have many strong elements at play—two rooms, light, sound or scent, multiple viewing points, and layered titles. As you refine the project, ask yourself which elements are essential to the experience, and which might be doing similar work conceptually. Fewer, more intentional decisions will allow the emotional weight of the piece to remain intact rather than becoming diffuse.

Your artist references are well chosen and thoughtfully articulated. Judy Chicago, Tracey Emin, Kara Walker, and Teresa Margolles all engage vulnerability, violence, and the politics of visibility in very different ways, and it’s clear you are thinking about how to balance quiet with confrontation. As you continue, I encourage you to let these references guide how much is shown versus withheld, and how material presence can speak without explanation. Is there a single artist you should/could focus on for this work?

Overall, this proposal is strong, sensitive, and conceptually aligned with the goals of the project. The next step is refinement: clarifying how the viewer encounters the work, narrowing the number of interventions, and ensuring that each decision is necessary and deliberate. You’re working from a place of care and intention—now it’s about letting the structure carry that weight.









Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Katie Campbell- Materialistic

 This/That/Other Installation:

3/24/2026

I had made my goal of getting 100 fish. I do want to make more during my time in the other gallery, if I have time. I am starting to fix my fish that are ripped, and also gluing on washers to the underside so they are easy to hang up. 

Right now, some things I am considering are whether I should have all the fish the same or just a few different colors, and going the opposite direction. I was thinking a soft yellow to contrast with the blue if I was to do this. I was also maybe thinking about adding a soft sound like rushing water from a river. 

Setting the walls up like Megan will be good. Is there a way, maybe adding in a bench like she did, to add a place to sit down and be in the presence of the room, as well as can I move the lights as I want a spotlight on the trout?



3/9/2026

I have so far made about 90 fish. I want to make it to 150, but I am not sure I will. I do feel that having some help this week and the week after spring break will help me a lot. I am currently figuring out the color for the fish, as I am at the stage of gluing washers to my fish and painting them. I am thinking of doing a light blue with a white dry brush on top because the texture of the paper adds a water texture. I am loving how this is coming out with all the fish; it makes me excited to put this up for my installation.

Right now, I am thinking about the way the other gallery is. I am stuck on how to add darkness and a soft light in the corner, and I am wondering how to create a door. I am not a fan of the big opening. I want people to walk in, not see it from afar. 


Katie, what if you used one wall like how Megan had it for hers and then install on the inside of that wall so you cant see anything from the hall but that wall?  The windows can be covered so the lighting is intentional.





3/1/2026

For the background, the blue serves the concept of the water, making it look like the fish are swimming and moving around. I do like the fabric on the ground as it makes it feel more real and coming out of the ground.

With the smaller fish, I had an idea of most of them being blue, but I made some a contrasting color, following the bigger fish, but I am not sure about this.

I will just paint on the wall and use nails and washers to hang the fish up

I’ve made 40 fish so far, which feels good. Seeing them all together makes the work feel more real and steady.

I also found the fabric I want to use for the floor and the colors that feel right for it. That part helped everything start to connect more in my head. It’s starting to feel cohesive rather than just a collection of separate pieces.

For paint, I’ll need the blue colors shown in the pictures below. I’m trying to keep the colors intentional and simple so everything flows together.

It still feels slow and steady, but I like that. I’m just continuing to build and letting it grow naturally.












2/23/2026

I’ve been continuing to work on my paper fish and have made five more paper fish since my last update, along with six wax fish. The process is repetitive, but it’s actually kind of calming. Even though the fish follow the same general form, each one turns out a little different, which I like.

I’m using/ going to be using paper, wax, fabric, spray paint, and glue to make the fish. Working with both materials has been interesting because paper feels really light and delicate, while the wax feels heavier and more solid. Seeing them together is helping me think more about contrast and material choice.

Some things I have been considering are whether I should paint the background or use fabric, whether I should paint the fish light blue, and whether it blends in too much with the background. I am also wondering how I would install it. Should I tape the fish or nail every since one also with the background? Should I use wood or cardboard to make it easier, so that I do not damage the wall much? 



Katie,

I’m really pleased to see you continuing with the fish and leaning into the repetition. The fact that the process feels calming is important — that rhythm is part of the work. The subtle differences between each fish are also a strength. Repetition with variation is far more compelling than perfect uniformity.

I also appreciate that you’re paying attention to material contrast. Paper vs. wax is a meaningful decision. The lightness and delicacy of paper next to the weight and solidity of wax can support your concept — especially if you’re thinking about hierarchy or direction within the installation. Be intentional about where each material appears and why.

Regarding the background: ask yourself whether it serves the concept or just the aesthetic. If fabric is simply acting as a color field, paint may be cleaner and more resolved. If fabric adds physical depth, texture, or affects how light behaves, then it may be worth it. Keep it purposeful. Avoid decoration for decoration’s sake.

As for color, blending is not necessarily a problem. If the smaller fish recede into the background, that could reinforce hierarchy. The larger fish or the one moving differently should carry more visual weight. Think in terms of emphasis rather than matching.

Installation-wise, do not tape them. Tape will read temporary and unresolved. If possible, install directly into the wall with small nails or pins. That commitment will make the piece feel integrated with the architecture rather than applied to it. Only use wood or cardboard backing if there is a conceptual reason to separate the work from the wall — not just to protect it.

Overall, you’re moving in a strong direction. Keep refining your decisions so that every choice — material, color, attachment — supports the idea rather than just solving a practical problem.

Let’s talk through the layout in person so we can make sure the corner installation has the impact you’re envisioning.


2/9/2026

I decided what I want to do for the other installation. I want to continue my fish. For this idea, I was thinking of putting the fish in a circle and having the big fish go one way, and the small ones go the other. I am going to make way more fish than last semester, like I want to cover an entire corner of the room in them. As well as I want to do it on the bottom corner of the wall in the gallery space. I think doing it that way will make it feel more overwhelming with fish. I want to add a blue fabric background and use an ombré effect as they go out. I want a light blue by the big fish to show light and guide your eye in that direction. I was also thinking about adding light under the big fish, so it glows. I also want to do it where I add more fish every day during the week my art is up. I am thinking about painting the small fish a light blue so you can see them, but they are also hidden as I do not want them as the main vocal point.

The idea is that the big fish swim towards God by swimming in the opposite direction from the small fish. This installation reflects faith as the choice to follow God’s guidance, even when it means moving against the current. While most of the fish move together in a continuous loop, one turns toward the light, breaking away from the familiar path. This moment of separation speaks to trust, courage, and surrender—the decision to follow God. Light marks divine presence, guiding the solitary movement forward. The work invites reflection on faith as an intimate act of listening and choosing, even when the way forward feels uncertain.

 





So far, I have four ideas for this project. I am not sure about these ideas as right now I feel like I am struggling with what I want to do. I want to do something with nature, light, faith, and abstraction.

My first idea is with a dandelion. I wanted to create the middle part of the flower as part of the wall. Create a cardboard piece for the wall side with some seeds attached, and paint some on the walls. I also want to create seeds blowing off the dandelion and floating up to the ceiling. I was thinking about adding lighting to the seeds, like they were glowing, since I wanted to do something with light. I want to add a fan somewhere so when you are in there, it feels like you are floating off with the seeds. I also want it to smell like a fresh flower in the outdoors.

This idea concerns looking at the small things in life and the found-object installation. It was always a fun thing as a kid to blow on the flower and watch the seeds float off, and to make a wish each time. This one is a little more nostalgic and always a fun thing to do, which I sometimes forget because I am so focused on my stress. This also brings in my theme of nature and faith, as I love the small things God created for us to enjoy.

Some things I am stuck on are what I will do with the background. I have an idea of painting wind patterns all over. I have another idea: painting a meadow to make it look like the wind is blowing. Another idea of painting just the shadows of the seeds with a yellow glow. I am also not sure how to add the fan and lighting.

 


My second idea concerns my fish from last semester. This idea concerns my faith, nature, and light.

For this idea, I was thinking of putting the fish in a circle and having the big fish go one way, and the small ones go the other. I am going to make way more fish than last semester. I want to add a blue fabric background and use an ombré effect as they go out. I want a light blue by the big fish to show light and guide your eye in that direction. I was also thinking about adding a light under the big fish so it glows. I also want to do it where I add more fish every day during the week my art is up. I am also considering adding a fresh-water smell.

The idea is that the big fish swim towards God by swimming in the opposite direction from the small fish. It represents going against the current, as fish do when they try to make it back home.

A current struggle I have is deciding what color to paint the small fish, as I did not like how I painted them last time.

 

My third idea is more abstract. It show God, faith, peace, and light.

For this project, I want fabric to drape from the ceiling. I want to create a large, narrow pathway to walk around, really immerse in light and shadow. I want to add a nature design to it to add this calming beauty. I want to make the leaves out of paper, since getting real leaves would be difficult with the snow, too. I do not want it to be just found objects like fabric. For the fabric, I want to use a white translucent fabric. I also want to add warm light surrounding the fabric to give it a glow.

The concept is that this installation reflects the light of God as a gentle, surrounding presence rather than a spectacle. Soft layers of paper, fabric, and natural elements filter light as it moves through the space, creating an atmosphere of calm and attentiveness. The work invites viewers to slow down and notice subtle shifts of shadow and movement, suggesting that beauty and peace are often found in quiet moments. Light becomes a metaphor for faith—something not grasped or fully seen, but felt through presence, stillness, and care.

I am not sure how I feel about this one I like it but at the same time I am not sure.

 

My last idea has to do the two gates. This shows God, faith, nature, and light.

For this ideas I am thinking about making two gates one big and narrow. I am thinking about either finding two old doors and making them out of wood. I want to use branches to create trees. I also want to make bushes. I am not sure what materials I have yet. I want to put light behind to make them glow. One more than the other. I want to paint the walls with a nature background and paint the doors with a depiction of heaven, featuring clouds and pastel colors. I am also going to create two paths one wide and one tight. Since I have the other gallery this can help by making my room into a rectangle.

This installation is inspired by the biblical idea of the narrow gate, which suggests that faith is not found through ease or spectacle, but through intention and humility. The space offers two paths: one wide and open, the other narrow and partially obscured. The narrower passage is surrounded by soft, abstracted natural forms and filtered light, suggesting protection, care, and quiet presence rather than restriction. Light glows gently beyond the narrow opening, functioning as a metaphor for God’s presence—something not fully visible, but deeply felt. By asking viewers to choose how they move through the space, the work frames faith as an embodied decision, where beauty and peace are discovered through attentiveness, restraint, and trust.

Some thoughts so far is how difficult could this be and how much time do I have. As well as creating the nature part and how I am going to do that.

There is a lot of sincerity and care in your thinking. The next step is refinement: clarity, restraint, and intentional use of space and scale.

  • You have clear, consistent themes across your ideas: faith, light, nature, calm, and guidance. That clarity is a strength.

  • It makes sense to continue with the fish, especially since repetition and making have helped you build confidence and material skill. That growth is visible.

  • For this project, the next step is to let repetition do more work in the room, not just on the object. Think about what happens when the viewer is surrounded by many fish rather than focused on individual ones.

  • Try shifting your attention away from details like color choices and toward placement, density, and direction. How does the accumulation shape movement, atmosphere, or focus in the gallery?

  • Choose one primary idea and simplify. Fewer elements, pushed further, will create a stronger and more immersive installation than trying to include everything at once.

  • Keep feasibility in mind. A focused, fully realized installation will be more successful than an ambitious one that feels rushed.


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