ABOUT DANIELLE FOUSHEE

I am an artist. This website features my work and highlights some of the varied
inspirations that inform my creative practice. Read more about me here.

Check out my facebook page or follow me on twitter at
@ArtistDFoushee.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Ellen Sollod: Studio Visit





Ellen Sollod is an amazing, thoughtful, and generous Seattle #artist. I had a fantastic studio visit and lunch with her today! Learned all about the trials and tribulations of working in the world of public art.

#publicart #studiovisit
 

Sunday, January 5, 2014

View from Mount Waterman




View from the top of Mt. Waterman in the Angeles National Forest. What a fantastic day!
 

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Drawing in a Friendship Garden





I created this afternoon intervention in the park today. I loved the meditation of walking around and around this tree to envelop it with my attention. Then the meditation continued afterwards as I walked around the tree an equal number of times to disassemble the piece.

9 notes

Sunday, November 10, 2013

The Drawing that Makes Itself — Variation 07


Here are some more images from my recent series of Drawings That Make Themselves in the Sierra National Forest in California. That granite is such a great substrate for the drawings. I would love to go back and do more of these drawings sometime.


Variation number 07 was about how the liquid transfers from one surface angle to another.


Friday, November 1, 2013

The Drawing that Makes Itself — Variation 06


For this variation, I decided to see how the drawing would look when I mix colors. Having all the extra liquid also created a much bigger drawing. I enjoyed the longer, more meditative process.


This is my favorite set from the Drawings That Make Themselves. I am really excited that they were chosen for the Tool at Hand PDX exhibition at The Museum of Contemporary Craft in Portland. Check out the images in person before the end of January 2014!

Monday, October 14, 2013

The Drawing that Makes Itself — Variation 05


This is number 05 in a series of ephemeral landscape drawings that make themselves. I love setting something free and seeing how it behaves on its own — like a controlled chaos almost. 


I'm getting more and more excited about working outside in the landscape. Interjecting artificial, almost psychedelic colors into an environment filled with earth tones creates a tension that reflects the collision of urban civilization and natural landscapes. I created these drawings in the Sierra National Forest just south of Yosemite.


Saturday, October 12, 2013

The Drawing that Makes Itself — Variation 04



This series of photos documents the process of creating The Drawing that Makes Itself - Variation 04.









Saturday, September 28, 2013

Harry Dodge at Henry Art Museum


Last night Matt and I went to see an art talk with Harriet “Harry” Dodge at Henry Art Gallery in Seattle. I was super inspired!

Still shot from the video.

We saw a hilarious video called The Ass and the Lapdog that tackled issues of language — the ways we describe images with words to create materiality in the minds of others. And body language is so essential. The stories each character describes are so vivid and funny, so strange and surreal. Imagination is key for both the story teller and the listener.


I would love to have Harry come as a visiting artist at PNCA next summer... So smart, thoughtful, funny, and insightful. I love all the different media at play in these explorations of language and imagination.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

James Turrell at LACMA


Wow. I'm spending two weeks in Los Angeles this month, and I'm enjoying a lot of things I miss about living there. First and foremost: LACMA. I bought my ticket for the James Turrell show weeks ago, and it was worth the wait. I spent two hours sitting with each piece. I got too close to the work and the security guy hassled me a little bit (even though I didn't touch anything — how could I, it's just light!).



I sat for a good long while in this pink room. I sat on a bench and it almost seemed religious, like an altar or something. After I left this room, I entered the next room and it appeared green (even though it was just white). The sheer scale and effectiveness of Turrell's play with our perception of light and color is fantastic!


These holographic pieces were two dimensional mirror-like surfaces, but it appeared as though the reflections were reaching out toward me. Sometimes it's difficult to tell if the work is being projected or reflected onto surfaces or into spaces.

This show was even better than I imagined it would be. I wish I had sprung for the special light chamber experience, too! 

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Spending Time with Lee Kelly

 

This summer I joined the MFA in Visual Studies program at Pacific Northwest College of Art. It was an amazing experience — I can’t say enough good things about it. As part of our summer intensive, we had the opportunity to spend time with sculptor Lee Kelly (what a generous and amazing person), and to make our own work at his woodland property and sculpture garden.


I was so inspired by my visits there that I created two ephemeral installations. Each one took a day to install and remove. There's something profound about the idea that something/someone can be present to us one moment, and then gone the next. Like a fragile spiderweb that exists in nature, so do these pieces.


The web piece was suspended about waist-height. I moved through and between each strand as I built it, like a dance. The process of creating it became primary; more important than the finished installation. In fact, it took me over four hours to build it, and about ten minutes to destroy it.


This smaller piece was created earlier in the summer. I found a branch in the woods and used cotton twine wrapped around two trees to suspend the branch in mid-air. It occurs to me now that suspension and gravity are themes the recur often in my work.


Saturday, June 8, 2013

Welding is Awesome!

Wearing my welding mask.

Why didn’t someone tell me sooner how awesome welding is?! Yesterday I went for a one-on-one intro to welding with Greg Bartol (Studio B & Green River CC). He generously spent four hours showing me the equipment and teaching me some basics. Now I have a thousand ideas that I need to make immediately!

Friday, June 7, 2013

FIDM Poster: Finally, a Solution!


Thank goodness the clients finally let go of that brain concept. It didn’t have anything to do with fashion, but they kept pushing me to work with it. Someone on the team finally came to their senses and said that the brain looked like a psychology textbook. Indeed. I guess I had to go through all those variations before they could see it for what it was. This colorful, abstract textile is so much more representative of FIDM. I’m so glad we finally got a solution everyone could agree on!

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

FIDM Poster: Even more options


FIDM is an interesting client. I love the fact that they have a collaborative process. There are lots of opportunities to explore a range of different concepts, and just about everyone gets a vote on how things play out. On the other hand, sometimes it can feel like a project is going to drag on forever!


These are yet two more concepts for this summer’s promo poster. Hopefully I’ll get a decision on something this week!

Friday, April 5, 2013

Beginning Design Students: Gift Cards

 
Isabella Setina

My beginning design students did some great work last quarter! 

Most of my students last quarter were freshmen, taking their first ever graphic design class. We studied all the basics: composition, color, and vocabulary. I taught them technical stuff in Illustrator. We spent a lot of time looking at graphic designs from the world, critiquing them, and talking about audience.

Ashley Piper

For the final project, I asked them to design a series of gift cards for a favorite place. The cards had to fit together as a group, but also work independently for different purposes and/or audiences. These are two of the best examples from their work... not bad!