Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Return
Exhibition 2020 | Photo

Gallery Slider (Deprecated)
sortfileName
responsiveWidthtrue
height800

Angie Eldred

‘Humanism’

Name: William Foster

Title of work: 1. Fridge in which bodies are stored 2. Preparing for funeral #1 3. Cupboard of mortuary room 4. Preparing for funeral #2 5. Mortuary room 6. Loading coffin into hearse

Medium: Inkjet Print


Over the past few years I have become fascinated with the topic of death and the industry that surrounds it, after researching about the practices surrounding death in other countries and reading a non-fiction book about the life of a mortuary technician within the U.K, I decided that I really disliked how the western world perceives death and the funeral industry so negatively. The people who work in the funeral industry are seen as ‘creepy’ or ‘strange’ when in fact they are everyday hard-working people who put a lot of emotion and care into their work. For my works I visited Gabrielle Walsh Funeral Services and photographed the space and the staff at work. The aim of my final works was to destigmatise the funeral industry and display that those who work in the industry are normal everyday people who work hard to help those during often, very emotional times. People see death as confronting, but if western countries discussed the topic more and made it less taboo, death would be perceived how it should be, just a part of life.

Inkjet digital print
At the start of the year the aim of my folio was to create a body of work that represented what we can’t see when looking at the human body. I was clear I wanted my image to be portraiture with a single central focus and dark studio background, that emulated the aethereal, luminosity of Bill Henson’s depiction of skin and the anthropomorphic lines of the body, juxtaposed with the jagged edges and pop of brightness that the bone possesses.
At the beginning of the year I had a strict idea of what I wanted to do, and that was a similar idea but instead of collage I wanted to use projection. However, after my potential directions and having to adapt my work to be able to construct it at home I soon realized that collage both looked better and was easier to create in isolation. I focused more on collage in my folio, it reflected a more natural looking juxtaposition of bone and skin specifically with the smooth paper I printed on.
The collage took relentless focus to cut out, each tiny detail of the ribs has to be done, it I got there, and the outcome is beautiful, I love my works and I think the direction I followed is better than my original idea, it is textural and visually enticing. 



HideElements
metastrue
confluencelogotrue
commentstrue
edittrue
profiletrue
admintrue
titletrue
peopletrue
labelstrue
jiraissuetrue
helptrue
searchtrue
breadcrumbtrue
watchtrue
sidebartrue
inlinecommenttrue
spacestrue
createtrue
headertrue
sharetrue
favoritetrue
notificationstrue