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Indiana Daily Student: "Camaraderie helps artists through recession" PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 13:21



Arts

Camaraderie helps artists through recession

Troy Engelhardt of HCIFX.com
 

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Troy Engelhardt works on a website Monday at his studio on West 2nd Street, Bloomington. He is a ceramics and web design artist with a goal "to force computers to express the artistic visions of the most un-savvy designers and programmers."

POSTED AT 05:57 PM ON Jul. 7, 2010 | PRINT | Email |Editor | SHARE IDSnews.com | Camaraderie helps artists through recession | COMMENTS (0) | Recommend (0)

 



If people of all working trades could say that the economic downturn has affected them adversely, the arts community would seem especially vulnerable to the whims of the market.

Of 700 artists surveyed by the Artists Trust in 2009, 47 percent noted “fewer opportunities” and 44 percent noted “less demand for work.”


So begins the story of Troy Engelhardt, a Bloomington-based web designer and ceramicist. Troy decided to work in Web design when he experienced the difficulty of working as an artist within a failing economy at a time when art degrees are plentiful and talent is common.

He noticed that having a professional portfolio available online was a key factor in getting commissions and contracts.

“It’s probably one of the hardest things for an artist to do, to make a coherent portfolio,” he said. “It’s about appreciating their talents and displaying them.”

Artists’ promotion can end at Facebook — unless they have the technical ability or help to create a place for themselves online.

He said he thinks the results are difficult to quantify, but it seems that clients succeed because of the emotional advantage that having a professional website can offer. Troy looks for clients who are natural achievers and willing to go the extra mile.

In the past, he’s worked for JB Salvage and Clinique Wellness, as well as Quantum 7  Productions. He recently designed the new Q7 microsite, www.encounterq7.com. Troy recruited a friend and IU sound professor to play and record the music track for the site.

“It’s that kind of conceptual, inclusive, artistic camaraderie that I love,” he said. “I’d rather work with the competition — that’s something that’s really missing in our society. I guess you could say I’m an artist in a business world.”

Troy said he loves using people’s natural energy toward a common goal, an attitude that separates him from his business-minded counterparts. He’s unwilling to accept a corporate position and only takes jobs in the local environment out of principle.

“It’s immensely rewarding — to talk to people, meet with people, find their dreams and try to realize them,” he said.

He often does volunteer work, recently completing Habitat for Humanity’s “Builder’s Blitz” project, and is particularly interested in human-computer interaction, an emerging field in informatics.

Troy explained HCI as user-interface design, experiential learning and database organization. Informatics makes special use of prototyping, another of Troy’s skills.

High-fidelity prototyping — building a blog or website with free open-source technology, demonstrating this strategy to clients and helping them cut costs by 50 to 60 percent relative to the prices of a design firm — is his domain. He used this method for Habitat for Humanity, basically creating an instruction manual to help the company navigate site design and costs.

Troy’s advice is valuable given his background as a ceramicist. In fact, he took up web design simply as a means to promote his own artwork.

The competition he faced drove him to pursue helping others create their portfolios online, but his dream is remains strong: He hopes to one day have the funds to open a ceramics studio.

A student at IU-Bloomington, Troy originally attended the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis Herron School of Art and Design. His concentration was ceramics before switching to telecommunications for web design.

He still makes abstract-figurative ceramic works, focusing on the duality of beauty and evil, raw emotion and negative space. His pottery is characterized by beautiful mixed glazes and contrasts. It’s sometimes complemented with barbed wire and the occasional trompe-de-l’oeil, realism creating a dimensional illusion.

However, he says that web work is his main focus.

“It’s the most underappreciated art form,” he said.

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Last Updated on Thursday, 15 July 2010 06:31
 
eric-radoux-awkward.flv PDF Print E-mail
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Tuesday, 13 July 2010 16:39

Eric Radoux at Indiana University - "Awkward" Studio Shoot. 2008. Student Production.

 
i ran the jib
Last Updated on Tuesday, 13 July 2010 16:46
 
Local Artists form The Blank Canvas Guild PDF Print E-mail
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Wednesday, 14 July 2010 06:07

Arts

Local Artists form The Blank Canvas Guild

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Local artist Adam Nahas displays his sculpted hands Wednesday inside Cyclops Studios. Nahas became infatuated with hands after prototyping a robotic hand at IU. Most of the hands are cast from family and friends and possess sentimental value in each detail, from wrinkles to rings and fingerprints.

POSTED AT 04:54 PM ON Jun. 16, 2010 | Editor |

 


Tucked into a woodsy spot off West Second Street and across from the Twin Lakes baseball field is a white industrial building.

Once home to a fire extinguisher outlet, Cyclops Studios now houses The Blank Canvas, a local artists’ guild founded by IU graduate Adam Nahas along with friends John Shestak and Kyle Caird.

The three met as students in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts.

“One day we’re gonna have an art studio, we said — and sure enough, the day has come,” Nahas said as he walked around the studio.

He said it wasn’t as hard to start a studio right out of school as others might think. Nahas has worked for five years at the White River Foundry in Spencer, Ind., so he has been able to pursue his artwork full time while maintaining a commitment to the emergent guild.

The studio is cool and spacious inside, and artists of many persuasions have left their works-in-progress there for the time being. Nahas showed me around to each artist’s desk — to collage books created by Heather Dent, Ryan Cook’s guitar space, computers used for graphic design by Troy Engelhardt and Kyle Caird, and even a dance studio for guild member Charlotte White.

I couldn’t help but notice the two massive clay tigers guarding the door and seemingly melting in the heat. He explains to me that he is remodeling them after a mishap by the original artist — a project from the foundry in Spencer. Inside is a similar lion’s head, which he explains will soon become a gargoyle.

Nahas first sculpts his figures in an oil-based clay called plasticine, then covers them in a plaster shell to create a mold. He also enjoys sketching, his first medium, but said he values metalworking for its ability to be welded and added or subtracted to.

A copy of Zoobooks is on his worktable.

“Abstracts are kind of hard for me to do. I like to work on animals and mythological creatures,” Nahas said. “And I have a fascination with human anatomy.”

To the right of us is a copper cast of a woman’s leg, and to the front, a mold of a man’s back. He’s interested in all kinds of body casting, from babies’ footprints to couples’ hands and even sculpture portraits.

“I accept commissions. Eight-foot statues or 1-inch rings — I can do it or I can learn how to do it.”

He says that starting Cyclops Studios was little more than tax forms and paperwork, but that it did allow him to become more business-minded. However, he’s quick to remind me that the guild members have a big hand in running the show.

Cyclops always needs help, Nahas said. Eventually, he said he’d like to offer classes here, as a sort of community art school.

“We’re starting something. Maybe we’ll inspire another Andy Warhol. But that’s a long ways off.”

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 14 July 2010 06:16
 
Indiana University Alumni Association: Web Motion Graphics PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 15 July 2010 20:49
http://search5.iu.edu/search?as_sitesearch=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.indiana.edu%2F~telecom&q=troy+engelhardt ...
Indiana University Alumni Association:  Web Motion Graphics
 IU  Bulletin Board

"IU Bulletin Board"
Erica Briggs, project leader (BA Telecommunications '08)
Balakrishna Chennupati (MS Human Computer Interaction Design '08)
Troy Engelhardt (BA Telecommunications '07)
Cristal Jenkins (BA Telecommunications '08)

Last Updated on Thursday, 15 July 2010 21:27
 
HCIFX Presents Habitat for Humanity of Monroe County. Bloomington, Indiana: 3D Logo Animation & Builder's Blitz 2010 (video edit) PDF Print E-mail
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Saturday, 24 October 2009 00:23

Builder's Blitz 2010  (Final Draft)

 
Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 June 2010 19:14
 
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