Thursday, May 2, 2013

WET PAINT

Three weeks into Final Project and the studios look...well, messy. Messy in a good way. Every surface is covered in evidence of artwork in progress. Here's what we found on one quick walk through the studios today:


 




                       








Friday, April 26, 2013

Bzzzzzzzz...The Ox-Bees Have Landed!


Photos by Lenora D. and friend of Oxbow Allison Watkins
The Oxbow gardens are an integral part of the school--they beautify the campus, provide food, and serve as a platform for artistic inspiration and scientific study. For the last three years, they have been undergoing a face lift. Each spring we've incorporated a major new element into the garden program, each one a step towards enhancing the program's main objectives--to sustain a closed-loop ecological system, to create a lab for the science course, and to provide lots of healthy, fresh, and delicious food to the dining hall. OS24 welcomed the Ox-Chix, which have since become one of the campus's most beloved features. The eggs go directly to the dining hall for breakfast, and the chix provide an important source of soil fertility. OS26 constructed a beautiful  greenhouse (generously donated by Oxbow board member Katie Wheeler), which has enriched the garden program in more ways than we ever could have imagined--namely by allowing us to start all of our own seedlings and to beef up our production of greens during the cold months. Bees were the missing link in our overarching vision for a sustainable garden program at Oxbow. Now, after over a year of planning, the gardens are host to a thriving new colony of honeybees.


 3lbs of bees!



The bees (approximately 10,000 of them!) arrived as a "package" -- a small screened box with a can of "bee food" (sugar syrup) attached. 




Worker bees covering the queen cage







Inside the package, the queen was isolated in her own little cage. To install the bees in their new home, we first removed the queen cage from the package...







The queen cage with candy plug




Her Royal Highness
















...and attached it to a frame. Then we released the rest of the bees into the hive and put on the top cover. The little black tube you see on the queen cage (above right) is filled with candy, which the worker bees eat their way through. This takes a day or two, and during that time the hive acclimates to the new queen. When all the candy is gone, the queen crawls out of her cage and settles in for a lifetime of egg-laying.

The Ox-Hive




In a couple weeks, we'll look inside the hive to make sure that everything is going smoothly. For now, we'll keep our fingers crossed that our bees like their new digs. We've heard that other folks who install bee colonies on their property see an incredible increase in fruit and veggie production within the year, so we're very excited for that possibility. And, of course, there will be honey! 
An added bonus of beekeeping: bee suits make us look like aliens

Friday, April 19, 2013

Preliminary Research

Final Project is officially underway! After conducting some preliminary research over spring break, students turned in their project proposals on Wednesday. OS28 is now deep in the process of exploring and solidifying ideas for both research topics and artwork. We'll report back soon on what that process looks like. In the meantime, we'd like to invite you to engage in an activity that the students completed over break--the Final Project Brainstorm Scavenger Hunt! This activity is designed to get the brain juices flowing, and to get students into the mode of identifying and exploring topics that interest them. 

If you were designing a Final Project, what would you investigate? 



Friday, April 12, 2013

Meet Raven

How did you find out about Oxbow? And why did you want to come here?

I found out about Oxbow through one of my classmates at school who came here last semester. I wanted to come here for the simple fact that Oxbow seemed like an awesome place to come and explore within myself abilities that I didn’t think were there.

How has it been adjusting to life away from home, and a totally new school environment?

This is a totally new environment but I feel comforted and safe between the faculty, staff and students. I think that the hardest part is waking up on my own in the morning… that’s something that was new for me because my mom always did it! Ultimately being here has tested my independence. 


What aspect of the Oxbow experience (curriculum element, art project, community life, etc.) has been the most impactful for you?

The curriculum is something so different and impactful for me because I never really was in tune with myself. I think one thing, since being here, that has helped me is channeling my feelings and writing personal essays. I was always so used to analyzing that I never really thought about me. 

What is your favorite color and why?

I love the color red because its so rich, and I personally think that I look the best in the color red.


What kind of music do you listen to when you’re making art?

I tend to listen to Beyonce mostly. I think that’s because she has different genres of music. Some is pop, some is techno pop, some is rhythm and blues…I listen to it all, on FULL BLAST.


What kinds of things inspire and inform your artwork? (Where do you look for inspiration?)

I think that my past experiences inspire me. I tend to personalize my artwork so that it applies to me directly, or to something that has affected me negatively or positively. I hadn’t really realized until recently that I tend to use more of a dark pallet of paint colors. I don’t know why that is.


Are they are any artists whose work you are particularly excited about right now?


I don’t have anyone in specific but Larry Thomas’ art is one that really opened eyes for me. I think that his intentional lines embroidered within text is something that I would love to try doing. His passion for helping others work with ink and other mediums was just really inspiring and special to me.


Do you have any special or secret talents?

I can sing and dance real well!

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Meet Jose

We've decided to launch a series of student interviews as a way to showcase the dynamism of OS28. Jose from Emeryville, California (via Mexico) has offered to be our first interviewee. Thanks Jose!
__________________________________________________________________________________________________



How did you find out about Oxbow? And why did you want to come here?

In my freshman year, Jordan Felling came to promote Oxbow to my school. When I saw videos, I really got inspired to apply. I decided to come because I wanted to expand my artistic abilities as well as become more independent and meet new people.

You are more than half way through the semester already. How has it been adjusting to life away from home, and a totally new school environment?

It’s surprising to realize that I’m almost done with this amazing journey. It has been that, an amazing and beautiful journey. Since day one, I’ve loved my new home, but in the first days it was really difficult to be away from home. However, as I got comfortable with my roommates and all the students, I began to feel a sense of family with everyone and my experience became a lot better. 



                                    What aspect of the Oxbow experience has been the most impactful for you?

The most impactful project for me was writing my personal memoir book for English class. I remember writing at around 1:00am while everyone else was asleep. When I began to write about my mom I got a little emotional and it reminded me of all the reasons why I was here, which gave me an extra push to stay up even longer and finish the entire book. 

Do you have a favorite Oxbow meal?

Oxbow for me has been a place of discovery. An example is the variety of new foods that I've tasted. At Oxbow I discovered that I do not hate all salads, and I finally found a salad that I like--Caesar salad. However, even though I find the Caesar salad delicious, there is no better meal at Oxbow than when there is Mexican food. 



What kind of music do you listen to when you're making art?

When I make art I love being the only one in the studio because I can play my own music loud on the speakers. My favorite music to listen to when I make art is rock in Spanish, salsa, cumbia (which almost nobody in this school even knows about) and sometimes hip-hop.






Tell us a little bit about this painting on the left.

My Narrative project painting made me discover many things about myself. Before this painting I felt really uncomfortable using paint. I personally did not like painting before this project. However, when I decided to paint the Mexican flag and a reflection of myself, I got really into it and I began to have a personal relationship with the paint. I got so attached to it that I did not even want to leave the painting studio. I was in there every single minute of open studios and I was even late to lunch because I wouldn’t notice the time. This painting made me realize that I can enjoy painting and that it is really interesting for me to make art related to Mexico. Even though I was not born in Mexico, I feel 100% Mexican. I feel good learning about the culture and even better making art about it.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Looking at Language

OS28 students are currently in their last rotation of the Focus units, intensive two-week courses in History, English, and Science. In English class, students are working with the theme of personal memoir, and exploring the art of bookmaking. 

Katie W.
What makes a book a “book”? For this English project, we are studying a book as a sculptural object, an artwork that can be a vehicle for a compelling story and can be aesthetically pleasing in its visual form. Over the weekend, students were invited to consider various experimental visual techniques used by writers to carry forward a message or change the way we look at language. In short, this was an opportunity to “reinvent” a found book…to make it new! Here are a few examples:

Zoe H.

Emily Rose N.

Nora S.

Annie C. 


Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Sprung Spring




Spring on the Oxbow campus is fantastically beautiful. Thoreau might call it a "delicious" time of year, and rightfully so...the trees are blooming, the birds are singing, and the gardens are booming. The greenhouse is full of tender new green life. It happens every year, but it never ceases to be a surprise.




This hasn't been the rainiest of winters, but it certainly was a cold one, and for a while there it felt like nothing would ever grow again. Then, seemingly over night, there is so much to eat. Look at the leeks! And the arugula! And the broccoli is huge! And the hens have started laying again! Delicious indeed.



Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Self Portrait

Here at Oxbow we like to ask big, juicy questions. Essential questions. These questions provide entry into research, and the impetus to begin art making. One question that gets asked a lot, perhaps to the point of exhaustion, is "Who am I?" It starts before a student even arrives on campus -- as part of the application process, prospective students are asked to create a self portrait in any medium. That's it -- no other guidelines are specified. It's an assignment that requires the asking of other (sub-essential, you might say) questions: How do I present myself to the world? How do I want to present myself to the world? What are my passions? What role do I play in my family / my school / my community? And so on. 

The theme of "self portrait" is revisited several times throughout the semester, both in art projects and in humanities coursework. In the New Media studio, students in the Narrative unit were at it again, creating short films in response to these questions: Who am I? Where have I been? Where am I now? Students were asked to think of their film as a "poetic interpretation of the self," and to use a combination of moving images, still photographs, sound, and text to create the narrative of their self portrait. Emily Rose (from Massachusetts), Vasaris (from Illinois), Lesedi (from Texas), and Stanley (from Massachusetts) each took a very different approach to the assignment, and have generously offered to share their films. 


EMILY ROSE


VASARIS


LESEDI


STANLEY


Friday, March 8, 2013

Light, Composition, and Honest Expression



Lucas Foglia, drawn by Izzy P.
This week marked the finish of the semester's first visiting artist residency. Lucas Foglia, photographer extraordinaire, spent ten days working with OS28 in and out of the studios. OS28'er Izzy introduces Lucas: "Lucas Foglia’s work has roots from his childhood spent on his family’s farm not far from New York City. His most recent work, titled “A Natural Order,” focuses on the details of lifestyles alternative in their essence, by sustaining themselves close to the earth. From images of coal-miners to families living in wigwams, we can reflect on our own lives. We ask ourselves why the images provoke feelings of strangeness, familiarity, or quiet beauty. The poignancy of Foglia’s photos are snapshots from weeks on the inside of individual lives--an existence based on a genuine connection to the land. Currently, Foglia teaches at San Francisco Art Institute, and is showing his work in six countries this spring." 

Over the course of several days, Lucas asked the students to make 300 photographs of "things that interest you." Students then carefully reviewed their stock of photos, searching for a common theme, and curated a suite of 20 images that embodied and demonstrated that theme. Their final task was to write an artist statement. Izzy writes, "From the beginning of the week with Foglia to our final presentation, it was enlightening to see the evolving interest and sophistication that took place in our photos. Lighting, narratives, composition, honest expressions, and 
complexity were reoccurring themes that Foglia pointed out in our photos and had us 
strive for."

Liz, Maximum, and Joanna have offered to share images from their final suite of photographs. Excerpts from each student's artist statement accompany the images. 

LIZ




I am an artist because art is a way to communicate my feelings of my past.



I am drawn to the decaying of life and objects that I  find in my world. While I find parallels between destruction in the world and my own life, I can express things more positively through my artwork in ways that help me and my community. 








JOANNA




I am drawn to the idea of movement amidst stillness. We can never freeze a moment in time with our bare eyes, but in this series of photographs, I attempt to capture these instants. 












Our memories are often blurred, and there is very little we can do to preserve precise details. I seek to create an unreal ghostliness and eeriness through photographing striking settings while juxtaposing harsh lines with fluid figures.







MAXIMUM





Everyone’s perspective changes how he or she views the world. 














For my project I wanted to expand on my curiosity about how depth of field and focus affect an image and how it is perceived. I explored this through experimenting with multiple perspectives and different depths of field.