
Sunday, November 29, 2009
First Sale

Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Bouncing Around the Web
So in my efforts to get a name for myself "out there" in the world, I've tried putting my work on various web sites for all the world to see. But, I have a short memory, and often need to be reminded where I've put myself up on the wall. Here's a list for ya'll (Utah's rubbing off on me...) of places you can find me online:
MyArtSpace, a web site for artists to show off their stuff. They offer a few scholarships, one of which I applied for in connection with signing up for the site.
My online store on Etsy. I don't have a lot of items listed presently, but I'll keep adding stuff as I make sale-worthy items.
My own personal web site, ArtofMartinCarney.com, which I put together from scratch and periodically update with new art. Check about once a month or so to see if I have anything new.
Older stuff: "A Mouse's Tail" - A webcomic I did pre-mission for a little while whilst attending Snow College. I also would post images from some of my digital artwork, like this post's picture. Related to that webcomic are a couple articles in the ComicGenesis Wiki: Comic, and artist.
How do you keep an idiot busy? To find out, go here!
MyArtSpace, a web site for artists to show off their stuff. They offer a few scholarships, one of which I applied for in connection with signing up for the site.
My online store on Etsy. I don't have a lot of items listed presently, but I'll keep adding stuff as I make sale-worthy items.
My own personal web site, ArtofMartinCarney.com, which I put together from scratch and periodically update with new art. Check about once a month or so to see if I have anything new.

How do you keep an idiot busy? To find out, go here!
Thursday, August 20, 2009
So many blank pages...


I started getting interest in how books are made, and started making them by hand. My first experiment was not very good, but I learned a lot, and by time my second one was finished I had a good idea of how to do it right. On my third try I used leather, a more unwieldy but much more awesome material than the cloth I'd been using. None of the pieces I had were quite big enough for the job, so I actually cut three pieces for the two covers and the spine (pictured below).

I still made a few mistakes, which I corrected for my most recent model (the top two pictures).
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Trip up to the "S"

Yesterday I hiked up to the "S" overlooking the town with a few friends. As we climbed we passed many old, rusty cans, most of which were from the annual school trip up to re-paint the "S". Apparently they can carry cans full of paint up, but can't manage to carry empty cans back down afterwords. Go figure.
Friday, April 10, 2009
AP classes are worth the work!
The result? This'll probably be my last semester attending here. I can take the required class online and graduate at the end of the summer, ready to move on to a four-year university. The best part is that I can work full-time while getting that one last requirement, and save up for the next few semesters!
Monday, March 30, 2009
New Blogger Feature: Undelete Blog
Yay! I was checking on the blogs I follow and noticed a small little change on my list of blogs. Instead of having one blog, I had three, two of which were ghosted out. Imagine my joy upon seeing a little link with the words "Undelete this blog"!
So I was able to recover those five or so posts that I accidentally deleted a month ago and merge them into my current set-up! Hooray!
So I was able to recover those five or so posts that I accidentally deleted a month ago and merge them into my current set-up! Hooray!
Monday, March 16, 2009
Spring Break in New Mexico
Over spring break I had the opportunity to head over to New Mexico to visit family there, namely (big list) my mother, sister, three nieces, grandma, aunt, and Saúl. While there I got to go see a plethora of art galleries in Santa Fe. I also got to pound dirt into tires with a sledgehammer. And I saw the Mystery Machine at Trader Joe's.
I got chewed out for trying to take a picture outside of one gallery...oops. But another one had a rather amiable guy who let me take some pictures of the raku-fired pottery that they had there. Saúl and I went to Santa Fa two days to see galleries, and we only made it up one side of Canyon Rd. and wandered around the square for a while. So many galleries, packed into so little space, it was amazing how much variety of good art there was to see. Several people in the galleries were more than happy to talk about art, artists, technique, art as a business, etc., and I learned a lot as a result. It was great!
Some galleries I particularly liked: Chalk Farm Fallery | Pippin Meikle Fine Art | Art of Russia Gallery | Seven-O-Seven | Canyon Road Fine Art
One of the big reasons I wanted to go to New Mexico over the break was to visit my grandma. I hadn't seen her in years, and it was her birthday the Sunday after I arrived. I brought her one of my painting as a birthday present, pictured here. She appreciated it a lot.
As far as pounding dirt into tires, my mother is building an "earthship" addition to her home on a mountainside in the New Mexico countryside. Earthships are designed to be sustainable homes that operate off the grid and are built mainly from natural and recycled materials. The walls are made either from bottles and cans mixed with cement, or, as my mother is doing, from tires filled with rammed earth. The designs and ideas used in Earthships are well-researched...the guy who designed them (who graduated as an architect) has been working and improving on it all for years and years. I am rather intrigued by the whole thing, and impressed with how well it all seems to work. Of course, nothing's perfect, but that's true throughout this life.

Some galleries I particularly liked: Chalk Farm Fallery | Pippin Meikle Fine Art | Art of Russia Gallery | Seven-O-Seven | Canyon Road Fine Art

As far as pounding dirt into tires, my mother is building an "earthship" addition to her home on a mountainside in the New Mexico countryside. Earthships are designed to be sustainable homes that operate off the grid and are built mainly from natural and recycled materials. The walls are made either from bottles and cans mixed with cement, or, as my mother is doing, from tires filled with rammed earth. The designs and ideas used in Earthships are well-researched...the guy who designed them (who graduated as an architect) has been working and improving on it all for years and years. I am rather intrigued by the whole thing, and impressed with how well it all seems to work. Of course, nothing's perfect, but that's true throughout this life.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Salt Lake Gallery Stroll
Friday, February 13, 2009
I hate it when that happens...

So here I was trying to delete one of my two blogs...the one that I wasn't doing anything with. Well, I wasn't paying attention and I deleted the wrong blog! And of course they don't have an undelete feature for people like me...
...Oh well. Two months of my life gone. Okay, not really. Life goes on.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Blender

A little over a week ago I submitted a proposal for a gallery show at the school's gallery to display several pieces made this way. Each week the gallery has a new student show in their AltSpace, and I wanted to get my own work into one of those shows. Although I had just missed out on the slots available this semester, I was accepted for the first show of the fall semester.

At this point I'm really looking into digital artwork as a focus, and considering some career options that I'd previously ruled out. I have a strong sense that teaching art is where I belong. Yet as I examine the diverse fields that I could go into, and particularly the ones I think I'd enjoy most, I have to stop and consider what I'm going to be happiest doing. One of my purposes in life is to teach. But there are a variety of ways that that can apply in my life, and I am starting to consider some different options.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Being an Art Major
It's really frustrating sometimes to be an art major, or even an art appreciator, when you're a Mormon. I recall during my previous year at Snow of a couple of other students talking to one of the professors about their figure drawing class, how they were troubled with having to see and draw nude figures. I don't blame them; I'm troubled about the exact same thing. In fact, I won't be taking that figure drawing class until I transfer to another university, most likely BYU, where the figures aren't nude.
At the end of that same year there was a student art show with works made by a large chunk of the art students (and even a couple non-art-majors). I had a sculpture in that show. I had a very disconcerting experience, however, when I saw a drawing of a classmate. I had heard her mention working as one of the models for the figure class, but it was still very much a shock to see a nude drawing of her.
The art world at large, at least in the United States, doesn't seem to find anything wrong with nudity. In fact, I've heard the oft-repeated claim that the human figure is beautiful and therefore should be shown so freely. I, on the other hand, find the prolific exposure of the human body to be offensive. I understand and appreciate the value of studying the human figure to learn how best to render it, but seeing so many finished products tells me that's not what's going on. Also telltale is the proportion of female to male nudes. As I was researching artists online, I found an inordinate amount of nude figures among the artwork I was browsing.
It's frustrating that I can't just change the world in one day. What I can do, though, is to be one who adds to the good name of art today. I can set an example of what art is at its best, maybe not in quality, but in value.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
First Week of Classes
This week classes have gotten out early in most cases, which has facilitated running around campus making sure everything is in order - making sure my scholarship really does cover the $190 student fees, for example.
On a side note, although I was not initially pleased that meal cards were mandatory for cooking apartment residents (like yours truly), I am glad to say that the facilities have improved noticeably since my last year at Snow. They have an all-you-can eat buffet laid out most evenings, which for a starving college student is a boon.
In my Institute class today, I also found out that one of my classmates is going to be baptized this Saturday. I always find good things going on, and it amazes me and reminds me that this world isn't all the pits.
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