Petra Szilagyi

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    • Psi Zine Vietnam
    • God Boxes 2020
    • Solar Coochie 2020
    • Prayer Room 2019
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    • Billboards 2017
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    • Drawings and Paintings 2015-2017
    • Drag Me to Heaven 2015
    • Orris Butter 2014-15
    • Gifs 2013
    • Lagos, Nigeria 2010
  • About
  • Blog
  • Work
    • Psi Zine Vietnam
    • God Boxes 2020
    • Solar Coochie 2020
    • Prayer Room 2019
    • Chick House 2019
    • Billboards 2017
    • Tapestries
    • Pax the Bench 2014-2017
    • Drawings and Paintings 2015-2017
    • Drag Me to Heaven 2015
    • Orris Butter 2014-15
    • Gifs 2013
    • Lagos, Nigeria 2010
  • About

Sacred Animation

5/20/2013

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My latest animation. People keep asking me what the boob clown means to me, so here it is animated: maternity, non-judgement, enlightenment and humor. DIY religion.  
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3D Printing and the Queerness of Childhood

5/8/2013

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My little 3D print of Monsieur Cosmic Maternity himself. (c) Petra Szilagyi 2013
I attended two conferences recently: Inside 3D Printing Conference and Expo at Javits Center in NYC and Worlds of Wonder Conference on the Queerness of Childhood at Williams College. 3D printing, gender theory and child development are all informing my artistic practice right now, so it was a blessing to listen to people who have devoted their lives to these fields speak their knowledge. I'll do a brief overview of both conferences and give a little info on how one might make their own 3D print.    

On Tr3s Dee-z Nuts Printing

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Press pass...I haven't held one of these since I was the world's youngest professional pet industry journalist covering the pet convention in Milan, Italy back in 1999. (I'm not kidding)
So, 3D printing, for those who don't know is sorta sparking a manufacturing revolution, whereby consumer products can be produced a lower economic and ecological impact. Furthermore, they provide the ability for consumers to produce goods for themselves at home. With a desktop 3D printer you can 3D scan an existing good with a 3D scanner, 3D scanning phone app or Wii game console, or download or draw your own CAD design and print out what you need. IE you're out of clean forks...no need to do dishes, you can just print up another one, and, while your at it, you can update the open source fork design you downloaded to make each fork tine a tiny phallus.   

Obviously this holds huge potential for artists. Whereas the process of casting and molding can take weeks and requires a costly collection of tools and materials, 3D printing allows artists to quickly reproduce existing objects or create new ones from home or via mail-in service such as Shapeways, iMaterialize or Sculpteo. Some notable artists who have been exploring the possibilities include Frank Stella, fashion designer Iris Van Herpen, hat designers Elvis Pompilio and my favorite Heidi Lee, and YBA Marc Quinn- famous for his sculptures of Kate Moss and frozen sculptures of his head in his own blood. Here's a little interview with him: http://blogs.wsj.com/scene/2013/01/29/marc-quinn-on-3-d-printing-kate-moss-and-cultural-hallucination/?mod=WSJBlog

3D printing is usually done in a variety of plastics with a range of colors and opacities. 3D printing is also available in ceramics, industrial and precious metals, human cells (to create organs) and chocolate. Unlike CSS, which carves from an existing piece of material, 3D printing actually prints the materials as an Epson would ink. 

The coolest part of the conference, aside from speaking to Joris Debo of MGX by Materialize, was seeing a 3D printer that could create full color 3D objects using ink and standard copier paper, pictured below. I was told that these paper 3D prints have the lowest ecological impact.  

Big thanks to my surrogate aunt Tonya Forrest for tuning me in to 3D printing and telling me to "Go print something, anything, even start with your name."  Thank job my elders are hipper than I am. 

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3D printed cranium made out of standard copier paper

On the Queerness of Chilluns


Thanks to organizer Anna Fishzon, best history of fashion professor ever, for allowing me to attend. The highlight of the event was seeing her really get down, ready to pop at 8 months pregnant, to the musical stylings of Rocco Katastrophe (Rocco and I later bonded over our toxic and codependent relationship with social media, and our healthy relationship with our non-media socializing partners.)

It was a great conference. I learned a lot about various approaches to child development and how one might rear a queer child, the word queer being used within the full capacity of its etymological roots. I work a lot with kids age 3-8 and have encountered a few gender variant children, and I have now learned that it is not OK to give them special treatment and ask their parents if I can borrow them for cross dressing play dates.  This might be an inadvertent means of drawing further attention to what really shouldn't be such a big deal. Little Timmy likes to dress like a mermaid? Big deal, I like to dress like a hobo.

I was also introduced to the concept of homo-normativity. Much like hetero-normativity, it creates an image of (albeit homo) heterogeneity that excludes any and all forms of social deviancy which might include overt sexuality, flamboyant behavior or anything else outside the norm. One might see examples of homo-normativity in childrens' books about gay parenting, young adult fiction about queerness or advertisements that feature homosexual couples to sell products or concepts.      
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The not so normative pamphlet and my notes from a thrilling lecture by Michael Cobb on new millennials and the epidemic of narcissism titled: Just Adults: Protracted Infancies, Patti Smith, Lena Dunham, and Other Cool Catastrophes.
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Here's an image from Nat Hurley's lecture: The Queer Non-Places of Children's Literature. (The Robetr Mapplethorpe Children's Museum does not actually exist...but, perhaps it should?)
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Kareem Khubchandani's Lessons in Drag...and diamonds.

On Making a Tr3s Dee-z Nuts Print

I'm not really that technology savvy, but I found a way and I'll tell you how. I found a free online CAD program for small children (not really, but pretty much), in my case it was Tinkercad, but they just decided to go out of business so here is a list of alternatives: http://blog.makezine.com/2013/03/28/free-alternatives-to-tinkercad/

I made a little design:   
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Cosmic Maternity, Petra Szilagyi 2013 (c)
I chose from one of the affiliated 3D printing services (I chose Sculpteo and Shapeways...big ups to my girl Nora at Sculpteo). Chose the size and materials...originally it was 6 feet in solid gold, but I had to rethink based solely on the ecological impact of such a resource intensive project and settled on a more modestly sized resin model (I've got a ceramic one in the pipes). Then I paid just slightly too much money and received my little friend in the mail after a few weeks:
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Cosmic Maternity, Petra Szilagyi 2013 (c)
Cool, huh? 
 
Questions? Comments. Concerns!? Shoot...just not with a 3D printed gun. 

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Fun with Photoshop, Quarter-Life Crisis

3/22/2013

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Opal eyes, carnation cheeks, rose nose and watermelon lips. A face of beauty.

My collegiate artistic studies were focused in video and performance art (somewhere I have a video of myself interviewing another version of myself with the word "TAMPAX" shaved into my head- I'll find it and GIF that shit). I spent a lot of time studying digital cameras and the latest post-production software. It was good, it was fun, and, most importantly, I felt cool.  
Upon graduating and losing access to a well-endowed production studio, I started painting. It was as much a gain as a loss: free of blue computer light I was able to return to a regular sleep schedule, I get to work with my hands, I get to partake in an ancient tradition that satisfies our primal need to push mud around with a hairy stick, and I have more than just data to show for a hard day's work. 

Recently, however, I've started to feel out of touch. I sit around partaking in this 32,000 year old tradition, repackaging the same issues that have beguiled us since the dawn of inception, and I'm feeling like I could be a little more contemporary. (Side note: I also live in an old barn in one of the oldest states in the country, most of my friends are over the age of 50 (I'm 25) and, most alarmingly, much of the new pop music on the radio is made by people younger than myself. Holy shit, I am getting too old to be a pop star.)

Last week, to make myself feel less antiquated, I signed myself up for some photoshop lessons with Karen Wheeler (http://www.karenart.com/ ) in New Haven to start working the ole techno-digi muscles again. This is what I've made so far, and it is certainly affecting my sleep pattern.
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This is the great spirit, Abrasax or boob-clown. I chose things that I thought would be beautiful, however the dual nature of the figure is also suggested, despite the sweetness of the objects I chose. (Abrasax, or Abraxas, is a gnostic deity who encompasses both the dark and the light. My personal philosophy is 'do good, but acknowledge your shadow.')
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This was my first attempt at photoshop! I did it sitting next to Karen and she kept laughing/getting freaked out. Fun stuff.
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