Abstract

Family Mugs is a Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the College of Imaging Arts and Sciences in candidacy for the degree of Master of Fine Arts. Family Mugs by Erin Zellefrow is a formal documentation of artwork, conceptual thought process, and technical skills used to facilitate the creation of MFA thesis work and its successive gallery installation. It additionally reviews the artist's personal background, and artist influences that informed and drove the final body of work. Depicted in Family Mugs is the artist's deeply personal process of examining fleeting memories of childhood and departed loved ones. Zellefrow struggles to reclaim these lost faces and places through acrylic portraits, iron cast busts, and glass cast busts taken from the likenesses of strangers. The resulting invented family unit was arranged in a household environment installation. Family Mugs explores and recounts the struggle to reclaim and rebuild faded memories and lost loves ones. It embraces the beautiful, fragile, awkward and fleeting states that are the result of these efforts.

Library of Congress Subject Headings

Portrait sculpture--Technique; Portrait drawing--Technique; Families in art; Installations (Art)--Technique

Publication Date

9-1-2010

Document Type

Thesis

Department, Program, or Center

School of Design (CIAS)

Advisor

Lightfoot, Tom

Advisor/Committee Member

Sheppard, Luvon

Comments

Note: imported from RIT’s Digital Media Library running on DSpace to RIT Scholar Works. Physical copy available through RIT's The Wallace Library at: NB1293 .Z45 2010

Campus

RIT – Main Campus

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