#week5aite
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saharraa-blog · 8 years ago
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Week 5: Exploration Searching through Reid Library at the University of Western Australia was not easy but I did find two field guides which I enjoyed looking through. Field Guide to Archaeology by Eric Wood was interesting to look through because the field guide had black and white images and it was loaded with important. I found page 274 fascinating because it had all the vases listed and how old they were. The book itself was dirty pink and had no cover page, only the side told the title with gold writing. The inside felt olden and well written. The second field guide I found also at Reid Library was called Field Guide to India. The book was thin rather than thick and didn’t have many pictures over than one images of a map of India. The front cover was black and blue navy blue with the title written in a white box in black font. The papers felt like newspaper but thicker and rougher. The Field Guide was interesting to look through because it was full of information. Both the field guide was exciting to look through but I enjoyed the Field Guide to Archaeology by Eric Wood because it contained more information and images which allowed me to related the written words to the images shown.
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saharraa-blog · 8 years ago
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Week 5: Reflection
During week 5 tutorials we created a draft zine and looked at many different zine. Some zine were formal and long worded and other zines were funny and interesting. I created a watches zine because at first I couldn’t think of anything else to create in 30 minutes. Having a draft zine was useful because it helped me a lot with my week 6 assessment where I should create a zine using my ‘No-Space’. Week 5 reading covered the Centre for Land Use Interpretation by Karen Rapp. It spoke about the theory of the present. Week 5 also showed examples of zine and how to make them.
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saharraa-blog · 8 years ago
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Week 5: ARTWORK OF ART HISTORICAL QUALITY By: Karen Rapp The Centre for Land Use Interpretation's: "Theory of the Present"
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saharraa-blog · 8 years ago
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Art in the Environment Week 5: Principle
Reading: The Centre for Land Use Interpretation’s “Theory of the Present”
By: Karen Rapp
Reading the Centre for Land Use Interpretation’s “Theory of the Present” by Karen Rapp speaks volume about how artist communicate their artwork. Artworks have many forms and structure but each detail represented should have a meaning or a purpose. Every angle represented should form a story to tell. On the other hand, artist should use their highest abilities to document their represented work to the audience and to the viewers.
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