2/15/26 - Finishing Touches
I made some progress on my mini installation over the weekend. I glued all of the new strings to my animals on Sunday, but that was all I was able to muster because I was not feeling very good later that evening, and I was working on my BFA monday. I'm hoping to have all of these new strings fully, or at least mostly attached to the wall by Thursday.
2/9/26 - Artist Statement
I
chose to manipulate a box decorated with filigree on the outside and the inside
of its lid because the designs are reminiscent of a life-sized gallery. The
box’s walls are covered with red string attached to two animals, referencing
the installation Over the Continents by Chiharu Shiota and the artist’s
portrayal of her own experiences and universal human concerns, such as life,
death, and relationships, through visual entanglement. The animals within my
installation, a wolf and a raven, inspire my work because of the similarity
between their behavior in the wild and the relationships humans form. By
combining this idea of inherent kinship with Shiota’s work, this piece evokes
ideas separation of people through external forces that many people experience
in their lives.
The
black walls of the gallery provide a stark contrast against the red of the string
and natural coloring of the wolf and raven to create a focal point around the
animals, as well as make the viewer feel as if the room is swallowing them. The
taut string also fades into the darkness of the walls, further creating visual
tension and feelings of dread and curiosity about the unknown forces pulling the
strings. Each animal has a paw or leg outstretched towards the other as if
looking for help and desperation to not be separated.
The
small scale of this installation changes how this piece is perceived because
the scene becomes more intimate rather than grand and overwhelming. There is a
sense of curiosity to find out what is within such a small space, making the viewer
bend down to get closer. The miniature scale also makes the installation feel like
a moment frozen in time that the viewer is invited to see, rather than an
experience by which they are enveloped. On this scale, there is a sense of hope
that a full installation would be lacking because the viewer’s larger size
suggests that they may be able to interfere and reunite the animals. This installation
is psychological as well as visual, pulling at the feelings of onlookers
through a visual experience of desperation and tension.
2/8/26 - Finishing Touches
During the week, I worked on painting my animals and the inside of my box, installing lights in my "gallery", and wrapping my animals in embroidery floss. After some testing, I decided that the thickness of two strands of embroidery floss was the best option with the most visual weight, while not being too thick. I also painted the interior of the box black per Keeley's suggestion to make my animals appear to be pulled away into the darkness surrounding them.
To finish up before Tuesday, I am planning on poking holes in the walls of my box for the embroidery floss to be inserted into, then I will add a little bit of black paint to the ends where they meet the wall to further push the idea that my animals are being pulled into this dark, consuming abyss.
2/2/26 - Progress
I decided to make the middle image of idea two with the wolf and raven reaching for eachother within my mini gallery. Over the weekend, I started modeling my animals with Sculpey, and they were then baked in the oven on Sunday. My plan for before class on Tuesday is to prime my animals so they are ready for paint and to find string of various sizes to determine which ones I should use for my final installation.
Look at: Cai Guo-Qiang
This sketch uses a wolf and a raven, tangled in a string that appears to be dragging them apart. Each has a paw or leg outstretched towards the other, as if seeking help and desperate not to be separated. The themes of this idea represent the separation of people through external forces that many people experience in their lives. The animals are so close yet so far from touching each other, creating visual tension combined with the physical tension of the taught yarn. This is the idea I am leaning toward the most for the small world project.
This idea is working, and it makes sense that you’re leaning toward it. The tension between the wolf and the raven, so close yet pulled apart, is clear, and the string does real work here by creating both visual and physical tension.
As you move forward, the main thing to clarify is how this becomes a space rather than just a moment between two figures. At a small-world scale, think about where the viewer enters, how their eye moves through the interior, and how the string organizes or interrupts that space rather than simply connecting the animals.
The strength of this idea will come from translating that emotional tension into a spatial one. Focus on how the string can define boundaries, restrict movement, or create pressure within the interior so the viewer feels the separation rather than just seeing it.
1/26/26 - Project Ideas and Inspo.
Tara Donovan: Found Object Installations - Multiples
Donovan's work transforms everyday mass-produced objects like styrofoam cups, paper plates, and duct tape into large abstract installations. The forms of her installations have natural qualities, highlighting the duality between the material's artificiality and the organic movement they follow.
I am drawn to Donovan's work because of her ability to transform everyday objects in a shocking way, once the viewer realizes what the materials are. I also like her organic forms and how they play with light, sometimes having light sources hidden within the body of the sculptures.
Shiela Kicks: Soft Yarn Installations
Hick's installations redefine textiles by manipulating how they are traditionally woven, changing them from flat rugs and tapestries to mountains of soft "stones" and cascading ropes. Color is a major element in her work, often using bright, vibrant hues to create her installations.
I am drawn to Hick's work because of her use of line, multiples, and color. Her balls of yarn often look so soft and plush that there is a desire to jump inside them and curl up within the pile. Her installations have a theme of play to them, often resembling forms that evoke our inner child. My favorite installations are her ropes of yarn that often look like they are flowing through the ceiling and onto the floor like a waterfall of color.
Chiharu Shiota: Found Object and Web Installations
Bri, this is a strong and well-developed post. Your artist research is thoughtful and well articulated, and it’s clear you understand why these artists work the way they do, not just what their work looks like. The connections you’re making between repetition, line, entanglement, and emotional weight are appropriate and productive for installation thinking.
Your found object choice is also a good one. The box already functions as a miniature gallery, and the existing viewing port is an advantage rather than a limitation. The scale, proportions, and low ceiling are clear constraints, and you’re thinking correctly about how those constraints will shape what can happen inside the space.
As you move forward, the most important next step is choosing one direction and committing to it.
Regarding your ideas:
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Idea 1 (Donovan-inspired abstract forms)This idea works well with the scale of the box and your interest in light and shadow. Focusing on mass-produced or cast elements could allow the space to read as a miniature gallery environment rather than a narrative scene. If you pursue this, keep the number of forms limited and let repetition, material, and lighting do most of the work.
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Idea 2 (Shiota-inspired entanglement with wolves and ravens)This direction is emotionally strong and clearly connected to your ongoing body of work. The middle sketch—where the wolf and raven are nearly touching but pulled apart—feels the most resolved conceptually and reads well at a small scale. If you pursue this, focus on tension, line, and restraint rather than adding multiple figures or narrative details. This idea is well suited to the small world project, as long as the emphasis remains on spatial entanglement rather than illustration.
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Idea 3 (net-like forms with birds)This is visually interesting but currently the least defined conceptually. I would encourage you to set this idea aside for now unless the theme becomes clearer and more focused.
Overall, your strongest option for the small world installation appears to be the middle sketch from Idea 2. It aligns well with Chiharu Shiota’s use of line and entanglement, fits the scale of the box, and allows your animal imagery to function symbolically without overcrowding the space.
As you refine your chosen idea, keep asking:
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What is the dominant material action in this space?
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How does tension, proximity, and line define the “room”?
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What can be simplified so the emotional core stays clear?
This is a very promising start. The next step is narrowing, simplifying, and pushing one idea forward with confidence rather than continuing to explore multiple directions at once.









