Soft Sculpture and Beyond

Soft Sculpture and Beyond
Title Soft Sculpture and Beyond PDF eBook
Author Jutta Feddersen
Publisher Craftsman House (AU)
Pages 192
Release 1993-01
Genre Art
ISBN 9789768097385

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Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms. With Stuffed Fabrics, Fibers, and Plastics

Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms. With Stuffed Fabrics, Fibers, and Plastics
Title Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms. With Stuffed Fabrics, Fibers, and Plastics PDF eBook
Author Dona Z. Meilach
Publisher
Pages 248
Release 1977
Genre
ISBN

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Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms

Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms
Title Soft Sculpture and Other Soft Art Forms PDF eBook
Author Dona Zweigoron Meilach
Publisher
Pages 248
Release 1974
Genre Soft sculpture
ISBN 9780047300356

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Soft Sculpture

Soft Sculpture
Title Soft Sculpture PDF eBook
Author Carolyn Vosburg Hall
Publisher
Pages 128
Release 1981
Genre Art
ISBN

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Beyond Modern Sculpture

Beyond Modern Sculpture
Title Beyond Modern Sculpture PDF eBook
Author J. Burnham
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 1968
Genre
ISBN

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From Soft-sculpture to Soft-ware: Webbing and Interlinking the Material History of Women's Practice

From Soft-sculpture to Soft-ware: Webbing and Interlinking the Material History of Women's Practice
Title From Soft-sculpture to Soft-ware: Webbing and Interlinking the Material History of Women's Practice PDF eBook
Author Cevahir Özdoğan
Publisher
Pages 29
Release 2019
Genre Art, Modern
ISBN

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"The material history of women s craft precipitates and generates a model for soft resistance in responding to the hard, masculine, patriarchal world. Through an articulation of softness softening materials and technology we can restructure our relationship to hard, material impositions and carve new soft, interwoven, communal-communicative spaces. The opposition is subject to power. Shifting the position of women s craft from striving towards entering and simulating male spaces is a way of manipulating intersectionality. In this particular case, there is a certain intersection and interdisciplinary culture that occurs. On the other hand, what fascinates me in terms of materiality, is that the softness and hardness relationship is polarized by gender-based material and gender mainstreaming. The environment we are living is designed by humans through materials and tools that have been changing continuously. In early history, humans divided themselves by daily duties based on their gender role. There were many domains of this division but one of the elements that interests me is softness and hardness. At that point, the characterization of gender and material create the power balance. Feminizing male material through technology, sculptural and constructive materials (hard) as well as digitizing female material (soft) is the core of the thesis. As a result of the transverse of the material we see the non-binary aspect in my works. Technology is inherently masculine because it is always related to power. Particularly, a computer is a woman-made tool, however it is shown as an inherently male tool. There is an extremely strong relationship between soft-ware and soft-art made and shaped by women at the very beginning. However, hard power (masculine) conquered the tool to use for oppression of women. In my practice, using computer soft-ware is a way to take the tool back and women's soft-empowerment. Soft forms adapt to the body, connect with bodies. However, hard forms impose themselves on the body. If 'softness' is a role that is supposed to be adopted by gender, it is definitely supposed to be internalized by all genders as a soft ideology and as a principle of non-binary identities. In this thesis, I started to research the Anatolian Goddess to understand the history of women's craft practice in the particular region where I am from, in conjunction with that history, especially with regard to materials and tools, softness and hardness, woman and man, tradition and technology. It can be seen in this combination as a concern from my wall pieces. I used wood made of laser cut (software) and fur yarn knitting (tangible softness) behind the wood piece. However, the knitting yarn comes out of the wood with the soft body. This wood can be considered more masculine and the fur-knitted yarn is inherently belong to women's practice. In this piece I show the history of women's technological creation and invention behind the history hidden by patriarchy. The next chapter will examine this more closely. The tools we have now are the most efficient ways of effecting positive change and creating space where women can collaborate organically. The space is either cyber or physical potentiality. And the possibility of access by women that is community, national, and international. The most important point revolves around the communities of women crafters organized around technological crafting methods thanks to the internet, accelerated modes of communication, and the distribution and accessibility of new tools for crafting. It is in these spaces that new modes of making are explored, as well as the formation of strong feminine communities that, through their making, can imagine and build a world beyond the patriarchy."--Artist's abstract

Soft Sculpture

Soft Sculpture
Title Soft Sculpture PDF eBook
Author Lucina Ward
Publisher
Pages 28
Release 2009
Genre Sculpture, Modern
ISBN 9780642334022

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SOFT SCULPTURE looks at the ways artists use unconventional materials and methods to challenge the nature of traditional notions of sculpture. It includes works by American and European artists Eva Hesse, Robert Morris, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, Joseph Beuys and Annette Messager as well as works by Australian artists such as Mikala Dwyer, David Jensz and Ricky Swallow