Art Pete Pete Ashton is (becoming) an artist

Prototype Gaffer-frame

I’ve been thinking about ways to present my work beyond the usual framed or unframed, spurred on by the forthcoming Moseley Exchange exhibition. I’d like to do something inspired by the way the photos are taken – through a tube made of cardboard and gaffer tape – so on Sunday I stocked up on the black stuff and made a frame.

It’s definitely a prototype, hovering in that uncomfortable place between scruffy and smart and not feeling quite right yet, but I’m happy with how it came out and what I learned in the process.

Here’s snaps of the build so you can see where I’m coming from:

prototype_frame_01
An 8×8 print is fixed to the middle of a 10×10 piece of double-thick cardboard.

prototype_frame_03
Inch-wide strips to go around the edge.

prototype_frame_04
Cover the strips in duct tape and fix them to back of the board. The print is overlapped by the strips but not stuck with tape.

prototype_frame_05
Trim, corner and display.

It looks fine but it doesn’t look as WTF as the contraption does. The thing is I want it to be worth paying extra for (since I’m making these by hand and each one will be unique) but not distract from the image itself. Right now it looks more like packaging than a frame.

Maybe using different materials for the base and frame and using the tape to bring it all together in a hackery sort of way might work. I’d better start scouring the suburban skips…

Update

In the comments Rill has suggested a different approach which has me intrigued. Slightly sunken frames resembling boxes. Here’s her sketch:

Small%20Thought

I may well mock one up.

2 Responses to Prototype Gaffer-frame

  1. Rill Marchant says:

    Hey Pete, I could imagine something like….
    http://www.onevisionimaging.com/App_Themes/Default/images/products/finishedproducts/BoxFrameBlack-Large.jpg

    or
    a much wider deep box framing
    http://smallthought.tumblr.com/post/378602147

    Although I also love the idea of big black periscopes and cuboids of varying lengths that you peer into to see your beautiful backlit images in the distance – set at different hight. X

    Rill x

  2. DaniGirl says:

    Love this — thanks for the inspiration and esp for the how-to!

About

Art-Pete is the blog of Pete Ashton when he's thinking about art. It primarily contains photos and videos of work he's completed in this quest. The majority of his writing occurs on his main blog.

Through 2010 this blog was the home of TTV Pete where I talked about and sold my Through The Viewfinder photos. That stuff is still in the archives but I've moved on. Through 2011 this blog was a little confused but I think I've figured it out now.

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