Welcome...

This blog serves as a behind-the-scenes peek into the life and journal of an interdisciplinary artist. Learn more at merliguerra.com or luminariumdance.org, and thank you for reading my thoughts on setting the visual and performing arts into motion.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Amherst Storybook Project: Digital Sketches, Batch 2 of 3

As I continue working on the Amherst Storybook Project, it's daunting to catalog the number of hours I've spent researching and scouring the web for just the right images to bring my digital sketches to life! And from there, each piece of artwork begins with 5+ variations on directions I can take it. Yet at some point along the way, it all boils down to one perfectly balanced image for each. (If only I could hurry up the process!)

Here are four more of the artworks I've chosen to reimagine for the project. I cannot wait to begin casting our dancers inside these colorful, fanciful landscapes!

1) Are the dancers bursting from the dots? Or the dots bursting from the dancers?

Digital sketch of Sunali Rae Driver's artwork. Age 2, going on 3.

2) As soon as this one fell into place, all I could think was "Honey Hands." Perhaps this will be its new title moving forward...

Digital sketch of Emilia K. Mann's artwork. Age 17.

3) Marit's work is so creative and clever to begin with, that it's caused a lot of indecision on my end. Should the fish be gasping at a mystical mermaid casually swimming by? Or having stumbled into a school of divers?

Digital sketch of Marit Gubrium's artwork. Age 7.

Digital sketch of Marit Gubrium's artwork. Age 7.

4) I can't pinpoint the exact cause, but for some reason this image reminds me so much of one of my favorite books: Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak. Maybe it's the strange way the dancers are locomoting through the woods, or that the environment itself is surreal and jungly. Whatever it is, this image feels delightfully explorative to me.

Digital sketch of Tsukiko Tome Bhowmik's artwork.
The artist is now 7, though this work was created earlier in her childhood.

Stay tuned for more sketches throughout July, then the final photographs from overhead will debut in August!


Luminarium's Amherst Storybook Project is supported in part by a grant from the Amherst Cultural Council.

No comments:

Post a Comment