JULIA MARISCAL // BLOG

RECENT WORK IN ADDITION TO MY WEBSITE www.juliamariscal.com

Archive for October, 2007

Burnt > sketches

untitled juliamariscal_sk08.jpg

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Sketches > Burnt project

Sketches > Burnt project Sketches > Burnt project

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Exvoto> Spoon

Exvoto: Spoon

Do you recognise this “spoon”? I am sure that if you do and know the project … you will understand why I am making an exvoto and a prayer for the object.
For the ones that do not know the project … I will soon be posting the final object that hopefully will be out on the market. Keep an eye!

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Sketches > Burnt project

Drawing charcoal Drawing the models

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Drawings: Clothing

Drawings: Clothing_01

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Drawings: Clothing

Drawings: Clothing_03 Drawings: Clothing_02

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Melting Point

Melting point

Photograph of one of my pieces > project Burnt

2007, digital photograph 1/7

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String Around / sketch from 1999

sketch 1999

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3D sketch

3dsketch.jpg

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Potlatch

“(…) In his writings on gifts, the French anthropogist Marcel Mauss (1972-1950) refers to a particular and very rare type of ritual known as potlatch, widespread among the Indian peoples of north-west America (the Kwakiutl, Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian). Its original purpose was to redress the balance, trhough ritualised forms of destruction, of social differences caused by the accumulation of possessions. The spectacular destruction of surplus goods therefore assumes the role of a socio-political sacrifice in which the loss of property is associated with the possibility of attaining power. ‘And it is only through loss that glory and honour can be associated with goods. Potlatch is the opposite of the principle of conservation.’

Norma Jeane’s potlatch pieces are the contemporary expression of an ancient sacrifice in a society which idolises and pursues the accumulation of possessions as an end in itself.”

By Alessandra Galasso

‘STRANGELY FAMILIAR. In the studio: Norma Jeane’. TATE ETC. Issue 11/Autumn 2007 (page 62)

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