In
sculpture,
BOUNCE BACK
For the second sculpture, my professor told us that we had
to come up with a brutalist sculpture but this time, it was not with our
partners. We had to base our sculpture from the negative experience of one of
our blockmates whom we picked randomly from a fish bowl and we also had to make
it positive. We had to keep it a secret and interview the person privately, aka
through facebook.
To be honest, I was quite nervous about it because even
though my blockmates and I have been together for two terms already, most of us
do not really know each other that well because we are segregated by groups or
our previous blocks. I picked Bianca Bueno, I cannot say we are close because
the only conversation we had that I remember was when she asked something and
that was the first and the last. We are not even friends on facebook, and that
says a lot (HAHAHA). I added her and asked what her negative experience was. I
did not come up with a concept right away but I did not take too long either.
According to her, when she was in fourth year high school,
one of her teachers chose her to represent their school for a poster-making
contest. When the contest started, she was pretty confident that she would
finish her art work but then when the time was already up, she was not able to
finish it and she was really embarrassed about it. I believe that every
negative experience has a good outcome so from there, she began to practice
more and more. She harnessed her skills and learned a lot from that experience.
The concept for my sculpture was a ball in motion or a ball
being dropped. As you can see, the ball came from a high point, which
symbolizes her confidence and then in the middle was when it reached the
ground, which on the other hand, symbolizes her disappointment. I thought that
it was a really good concept for her experience because she really did get back
up and I even saw her AFREHND plates last last term and in my opinion, she is
really skilled. The sculpture is made out of sintra board and thirteen one peso
coins.
As an architect, I was really honored to be able to
translate her experience into something else. It was quite challenging because
I felt like I had to do really well so that the person would be able to
appreciate my work and I think she did, at least I hope.
I think that it was a really good trust exercise, better
than the trust fall, for both as an architect and as a client because trust is
a very important bond that both should establish.
Life Lesson: No matter how hard you have been thrown or
dropped, the important thing is that you always bounce back.