There has always been a fascination with fantasy and
mythology for me, especially when it revolves around Japanese myths. After the
first project I already had the idea in my head to create a mask inspired by kabuki (Japanese theatre known for its
unique style of drama and elaborate make-up) and Noh plays (another form of theatre that incorporates comedy and
storytelling with the use of masks to convey certain characters and emotions).
But instead of just recreating a mask I wanted to make a more “modern” version,
meaning I wanted it to sparkle and look more like a Venetian mask. And I
already had it in my head that I wanted to base my mask off of Japanese fox
gods and demons, or kitsune.
So, after a bit of researching I came up with my plan. The three main colors I found on kabuki and noh masks were red, black, and white. I didn’t look into detail onto why those were the colors most often seen on the masks but I assume it might have something to do with being colors you can see from any distance as an audience member during a performance.
So, after a bit of researching I came up with my plan. The three main colors I found on kabuki and noh masks were red, black, and white. I didn’t look into detail onto why those were the colors most often seen on the masks but I assume it might have something to do with being colors you can see from any distance as an audience member during a performance.
The first thing I did was go out to buy a plain half-mask
and foam paper from the craft store. I wanted to exaggerate the size of the fox
ears and I figured I’d need something stronger than poster board paper to hold
the weight of paint. I also didn't want the ears to warp out of shape.
After getting the mask and other random materials, I began
sketching out the ears on news print. Along with the ears I drew random
triangle shapes to use for the cheeks and nose. Then I cute those out to use as
templates. Here I tapped my shapes to the mask to give myself an idea of where
I wanted everything to be placed.
Then I traced the newsprint templates onto poster board, cut
those out, and glued them in place. Unfortunately, I used gorilla glue without
knowing exactly how to use it and I ruined the first mask completely. The paper
and foam kept falling off the mask even after it had dried completely. After
hours and hours of waiting for the gorilla glue to dry it just didn't hold to
the materials very well and I’m not sure why. I ended up having to scrap
everything and begin again. But hey, trial and error!
Basically, don’t use any other glue except hot glue.
So I hot glued everything into place and painted gesso onto
the mask. After letting the gesso dry, I took the templates I made for the area
around the eyes and traced that onto the mask. From there I free handed
everything else.
Because I have shaky hands I outlined my pencil marks with
sharpies so that my messy painting wouldn't go outside the lines. I let each
color I painted on dry completely before moving onto the next color. The paper
on the sides curled in on itself because of the paint which I thought gave the
mask a more dimensional feel.
To give the mask that “modern” look I was going for I
layered the red stripes with red glitter glue and the black markings with
iridescent glitter glue. I had black glitter glue but when it dried it looked
like I hadn't even used glitter.
(Honestly, I just really wanted to use glitter…)
Once the front of the mask was dry I painted the inside of
the mask white and after that side had dried I put a layer of glossy modge poge over
the front and back.
Made a second one because why not. I like to think they are
a reflection of each other.
The second mask has actual glitter paint on it instead of
glitter glue.
·Who are you: name,
major? Alisanna House, Fine Arts major.
·Why did you choose
this project? I wanted to stay
with the mask theme I have going on and I wanted to give my own spin on cultural
masks.
·How much time did it
take? Over 2 days and having to redo the first
mask because of glue discrepancies I reached the minimum of 15 hours. This
includes researching and sketches.
·How much did it cost? I already had most of the supplies I needed from the first
project, so I think I spent about $20 in total this time.
·What was the biggest
challenge? Getting the paper and foam to stay
adhered to the mask was a challenge, and it really sucked to have to start over
because of it.
·If you had it to do over,
what would you do differently? If I had to do
this over I would want to make the mask bigger, maybe sculpt out the facial
features instead of using paper.