It took me a while to decide exactly what would be in the box. I read the book Whalehunters: Dundee and the Arctic Whalers by Malcolm Archibald which was a surprisingly good read and gave me much more of a detailed insight into the conditions these men worked in and their day-to-day lives. I also did more artists research looking at Will Mclean and Marcel Broodthaers on the recommendation of my tutor.
Flicking through my sketchbook I found a photo that I had taken of a photo at a museum of a whaling boat, which was pretty blurred and almost illegible but I quite liked the way it looked.
It's a colour photo but I liked the idea of printing it in black and white using the darkroom so it could almost be a picture from the time rather than a photo of an old photo... Nice idea but in practice I really couldn't get a good print from it as the photo was pretty underexposed in the first place and printing in black and white from a colour neg gives a really flat image. Nonetheless I had four hours until my deadline so decided that the photo would have to do...
Flicking through my sketchbook I found a photo that I had taken of a photo at a museum of a whaling boat, which was pretty blurred and almost illegible but I quite liked the way it looked.
I decided to line the cigar box with ruled paper to mimic the boxes I was looking at in the D'Arcy Thompson museum.
To give the lined paper a fake aged look I stained it using tea. I kept the teabag to include in the box as I had been reading about how the sailors loved tea so much they would risk smuggling it onboard the whaling ships. Their love for rum went even further - often sailors would deliberately fall into the icy water as they knew they would get a warming glass of rum afterwards! As I am a lover of both liquids I decided to include the netting from a bottle of rum I have in the flat and the teabag I used. The netting also points to the nautical theme as it almost mimicks rigging on a ship.
I started experimenting with oiling paper using linseed oil as a reference to the whale oil the sailors risked their lives for. It gives a nice translucency to the paper which reminded me of the paper I had been looking at at the uni Archives.
I found a list of names of men who sailed on the whaling ship Intrepid which was written in beautiful copperplate handwriting. I decided to include a list in my box with my name included. The grid also added a bit of structure which I can't resist.
Attempting to mimic the handwriting was probably one of the most challenging parts of the project and again due to time constraints it wasn't as successful as I would have liked.
Finally I couldn't resist adding in my little boat linos which were probably one of the most interesting things to come out of my project! Going to work on them further in my own time and experiment with a bit of colour.
Pictures of the final piece to follow!
To give the lined paper a fake aged look I stained it using tea. I kept the teabag to include in the box as I had been reading about how the sailors loved tea so much they would risk smuggling it onboard the whaling ships. Their love for rum went even further - often sailors would deliberately fall into the icy water as they knew they would get a warming glass of rum afterwards! As I am a lover of both liquids I decided to include the netting from a bottle of rum I have in the flat and the teabag I used. The netting also points to the nautical theme as it almost mimicks rigging on a ship.
I started experimenting with oiling paper using linseed oil as a reference to the whale oil the sailors risked their lives for. It gives a nice translucency to the paper which reminded me of the paper I had been looking at at the uni Archives.
Two happy readers, topics of interest are whaling and the Boer War. #archiveseducate #archivesinspire pic.twitter.com/QKx301GQS6— UoD Archives & RM (@UoD_Archives_RM) February 2, 2016
I found a list of names of men who sailed on the whaling ship Intrepid which was written in beautiful copperplate handwriting. I decided to include a list in my box with my name included. The grid also added a bit of structure which I can't resist.
Finally I couldn't resist adding in my little boat linos which were probably one of the most interesting things to come out of my project! Going to work on them further in my own time and experiment with a bit of colour.
Pictures of the final piece to follow!
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