At the moment, I don’t want to focus too much on creating a fashion orientated piece but explain and work on the concept of ephemeral instead. To know what is best for my final piece, I began experimenting with types of melting and displaying I can achieve
Dripping from the air
To achieve the uncontrolled effect of painting- similar to encaustic art- I first played with wax dripping from the air… verdict- probably failure as the fire kept lighting out due to the nature of flame. Below are the results of my experiment.
I am really intrigued as to what results I would get if candle was all dripped out, but as the smoke and flame from the wick creates a burning effect on the candle, black soot remains in the ‘painting’ which I think defaces the ‘beauty’ aspect I am trying to achieve.
The initial drips were really simple yet beautiful- but as time went by, the flame turned wax into soot- then resulted in candle being put out after all |
When flame was lighting/ melting the wax, it created a really impressive pattern- almost like a repelent chemical reaction - similar to Helen Storey's molecule experiements |
I later turned candle back right round again- tilt it slightly and watched the wax drip from the side..... very tendious process !!! The outcome of this is the image above... what do you think? |
Melting with wick
Next I tried melting normal candles on a flat surface and documented it in a film .
The process takes a while to burn out but I think it really captures ‘life’ from the movement of the wax. The aftermath is also very calming and quiet compared to the dripping experiment. I think this style of display will represent better in my ephemeral piece- showing hints of destruction in a quiet yet damaging way
From these 2 styles of ‘melting’, I think the ‘wick’ melting works better in creating the uncontrollable and natural effect of destruction. Now need to plan what to melt.