My Chaboo by Maren Jensen Part 2

January 27th, 2009 by admin

We’re all monsters, you know?……

Continued from part 1…

First I sketched out the images I wanted. Some were more thoroughly drawn
out, like the portrait, and the tentacles were often free-hand as where
they are placed doesn’t need to be as accurate.

Then I use the etching tool (normally used on metal for dry-point or
acid-etching) to follow the images I’d drawn using pencil. The tool can
create a very fine line, but the grain of the wood can pull and push it
around a bit making it a little tough on the hands. After a few hours the
tool began to dent my finger so band-aids and cotton balls were needed in
order to keep on!

The etching process takes a long time as sometimes deeper lines than the
tool can provide ensure that the ink will stay in the grooves.

Next I spread printing ink on the areas where I had etched. At first I
wanted to do a lighter color, to contrast with the wood and the purple
heart inlay, but the ink stained the wood in an unflattering way. Instead
I mixed a color pretty close to that of the purple heart.

After the ink has been spread I used a wet rag to wipe away the excess,
ideally leaving it only in the etched lines. Because the ink was water
soluble and many of the lines were very thin I needed to do a few rounds
of the inking process.

THE EEEEEEEEEND!!!!!!!!!!!

My Chaboo by Maren Jensen part1

January 10th, 2009 by admin

I’ve been playing around with octopi, squids, and octopus-human creatures
for awhile now and I knew that’s what I would do with my chaboo as soon as
I thought about participating in the project. The interest stems both from
the amazingly odd structure  of the creature (read: fun to draw) and how
that relates to the perception of strange/not-strange.

The octopus-human creation first came about when I was given the
assignment to somehow depict an “other”. My first idea for that project
was “monsters”. I wanted the monsters to be labeled as such, but I also
wanted them to appear completely normal at first glance. In many of the
drawings I did for that assignment, the tentacles appear almost hidden to
suggest that what makes someone a monster isn’t always obvious, or
immediately known. I wanted this to suggest a questioning of our own
normalcy. Is a tentacle really a stranger body part than a set of toes? I
wanted the work to provoke thought about why we designate some things as
odd and foreign, and others as normal and acceptable.

We’re all monsters, you know?

Supa Cold Photo Shoot

January 8th, 2009 by admin

Just had a special photo shoot for chaboo artist Maren Jensen today because she is leaving soon to go back to Clark University in Worcester, MA.  In one of the great mysteries in life that is pronounced WOOSTER like WHOOT WHOOT.

Photographer Joe Mansfield and I took her to the footbridge across the railroad tracks next to my shop.  There is no shortage of grungy looking locales near there.

It was supa cold and windy up there!  She had this poofy red down jacket on but we made her take it off because it dominated the shot.  I offered my grey hoody that I wear for work but she declined, braving the wind and cold in short sleeves.  Trust me it was freezing.   My hoody must have really not appealed to her!

Way to sacrifice for Project Chaboo Maren.  Thats the spirit!  Can I get a WHOOT WHOOT!!?!!

New Chaboo Recruits

December 20th, 2008 by admin

Project Chaboo has really taken off since the last photo shoot.  The energy of the people involved drive the project further and further.  Revised participant list here.

Im doing a final round of recruiting and have met/talked to many interesting people who would like to be involved.  Here they are and some early ideas they have for chaboos

card design by Amy Ruppel

Amy Ruppel- painting, illustration > thick felt, natural tree branch

Maren Jensen- illustration > dry point etching

Sara Huston - furniture design

Jason Hernandez - wood > conceptual

Orange - salvaged materials

Marshall Ryan - architecture > new material selection

Erin Albin - screenprinting, fabric > removable cushion

Ryan Thomson - architecture > split design, fasteners

Lisa Kuhnhausen - interior design > string, wrapping, clothing

Sarah Bennet - wood/epoxy backfill

Brendan Budge - industrial design > steel, bamboo integration

Don Jensen - cantilevered chaboo

Megan Scheminski - painting > experiment with sumi ink

David Butts - inventor > kinetic sculpture

Marc Riera - architecture > sculpture, glass

Stephanie Beamer - furniture

Ryah Radomski - furniture > laminating aluminum blinds

John Paananen - interior architecture

Emily Steen - graphic design, environment design

Oluwaseyi (Shay) Sosanya - mechanical engineering> triangles

Tom Huang - furniture design > bamboo weaving

Potholders by Erin Albin of Appetite

Project Chaboo Participants

November 18th, 2008 by admin

In no particular order here are the artists participating so far:

Alisha Wessler - illustration

Lauren Wessler - wood, paper mache

Jennifer Mercede - painting

Chris Haberman - painting

Sohaila Adela - illustration

Kelly Neidig - painting

Nell Warren - painting

Robin Kaplan - illustration

Dave Laubenthal -wood, metal

David Bertman -wood, metal

Kari Merkl - metal

Joel Wakeman - wood

Juno Lachman - glass

Eric Day - wood, metal, fiberglass

Todd Griffith - painting

Joe Mansfield - laser

George Ramos - wood

Mike Halvorson - wood

Paul Sykes - wood

Lindsay Holmes - recycled skateboards

Jess Hirsch - watercolor

APAK - illustration, painting

Erin Albin (appetite) - screenprinting/fabric

Brendan Budge - industrial design

Lisa Kuhnhausen - interior design/fashion

Jason Hernandez - wood

Sarah Bennet - wood, epoxy resin

Karl Ramentol - industrial design

Ken Tomita - wood, bamboo

Amy Ruppel- designer

Maren Jensen- illustration

Sara Huston - furniture design

Orange design.build - salvaged materials

Marshall Ryan - architecture

Ryan Thomson - architecture

Megan Scheminske - painting

Don Jensen - wood

David Butts - kinetic sculpture

Marc Riera - architecture

Ryah Radomski - furniture

John Paananen - interior architecture

Emily Steen - graphic design, environment design

Oluwaseyi (Shay) Sosanya - mechanical engineering

Tom Huang - furniture design

Ben Wood - furniture

Emily Knudsen - interior design

Corbin Keech - architecture

Jim Haas - furniture