The end of year exhibition must be both an an
exciting and scary time for you?
It鈥檚 the culmination of three years work in about
two weeks. High pressure, but great fun and good kicks.
The show has a high reputation for the variety,
quality and breadth of work, what have you created as your final
piece?
I sculpt what鈥檚 best described as plastic tubes.
They are heat pressed as a process and will be displayed across
St George Street, strung up between the college buildings. These
will be brightly coloured, almost like festival lanterns.
Liz sits with part of her exhibit |
My degree has been looking at plastics and concentrating
on what you can do with plastics in terms of heat pressing and making
it into things.
This way has worked the best and being able to
turn out 90 of them has been fantastic. They
can be used for interiors, exteriors, gardens.
Outside of art the process is quite industrial.
I鈥檓 using a massive heat press to layer plastics. They鈥檙e heated
up to 180 degrees, then I roll them and sculpt them into things.
The plastic comes out flat, then I roll them and
seam them into tubes as this is the most natural form that the plastics
develop into. In a way it鈥檚 letting the plastic do what it wants
to do naturally, but with a professional edge.
What happens next for you?
I love the idea of my work being outside. I think
in terms of the material and the colour it works really well.
In the future, I'm looking at community projects
and doing work that can been seen outside. I鈥檇 like to look at doing
more industrial things.
When you say you're studying textiles, are people
surprised are you work in plastic?
Tubes (detail) |
Yeah, even my dad thinks I鈥檓 going to be doing
some fabric work soon. I think it鈥檚 about looking at textiles in
a new and contemporary way.
In terms of plastics, it's amazing what鈥檚 going
on in plastics and clothes at the moment.
There are clothes with nylon, polyester, clothes
have got plastics in them so this is just looking at hard-core plastics
in terms of looking at what鈥檚 going on there is is a textile and
will be forever.
See
more works by NSAD students
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