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Plastics and Art

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Title: Plastics and Art


1
Plastics and Art
  • Caroline Bunnell
  • Kar-Chan Choong
  • Crystal Hou

2
Introduction
  • Art no single definition, use of skills and
    imagination in creation of aesthetic objects,
    environment, or experiences that can be shared
    with others.
  • Plastics synthetic polymers, dictionary defines
    it as capable of being molded or of receiving
    form.

3
Why plastics are used?
  • Capable beyond the capacity other materials.
  • Give any complex shape.
  • Durable, inexpensive, light in weight,pleasant to
    handle, not scratch.
  • Color
  • Easy to combine with other materials.

4
Plastics as Art Medium
  • Decorative Art
  • Architecture
  • Sculpture
  • Art Restoration
  • Modern Paint

5
Decorative Art
  • Earliest plastics used Vulcanite, Parkesine and
    shellac.
  • 1860s, celluloid created to replace ivory.

6
  • 1920s, Bakelite Beetle were used to substitute
    wood in radio cabinets.
  • Bakelite- colorful and glossy effect.
  • Beetle used for kitchen and tableware chemical
    stability and lighter color.

7
  • Melamine, Nylon and Polythene are used in
    tableware and laminates.
  • Polyurethane, ABS, acrylic PVC are used by
    designers to create product, clothes jewelers
    with foam shape glossy wet look.

8
Nylon
  • Both Nylon-6,6 and Nylon-6 can be extruded into
    strong fibers, and can be made into textiles
    similar to silk and cotton, although the most
    common and sought after use of nylon in the first
    30 years after its discovery was as women hosiery
    and stockings.
  • The reason why nylon makes good fibers because of
    the hydrogen omitted. There is a hydrogen bond
    attraction between the N-bonded hydrogen atoms on
    one chain and the C-bonded oxygen atoms on
    another.

9
Architecture
  • Not widely used before ,misconception of
    plastics, suspicious of longevity.
  • Extensively used now to replace traditional
    building materials such as protective coating,
    insulator, damp proof membrane.
  • 1940s, traditional materials cost increased,
    plastics were manly used in fencing, wall
    ceiling claddings joinery molding.

10
  • In expensive architectural, transparent acrylic
    or scratch- resistant polycarbonate sheeting are
    used can be heat-formed to curve and shape,
    high resistance to breakage.

11
Centre Georges Pompidou (1977), Paris
  • The external escalator tube are formed from clear
    plastic panels shaped into curves.

12
IBM Pavilion
  • Designed by Renzo Pianos Building Workshop in
    which the strength of formed polycarbonate is
    cleverly exploited.

13
Olympic Game Tent
  • In 1972, Munich.
  • Tension structure designed by Frei Otto.
  • Synthetic fabrics made from nylons, polyester or
    glass fiber coated with PVC or neoprene.

14
Fuji Pavilion
  • Expo 70 in Osaka.
  • The latter comprise either single later,
    air-supported membranes that require a constant
    input of air to maintain internal pressure, or
    tubular, ribbed air-inflated structure.

15
US Pavilion
  • Acylic Panel were used within the geodesic dome
    structure designed by R. Buckminster Fuller for
    the US pavilion at Expo 67, Montreal.

16
Disadvantages
  • Flammability and degradation of plastic.
  • Unavoidable environmental concern as energy used
    and pollution in manufacturing process.

17
Advantages of Using Plastics in Sculpture
  • Versatility
  • Light weight
  • Low cost
  • Uses the same tools as in metals, wood

18
Polyester Resin
  • Thermoset hardens when a catalyst is added or
    heat is applied
  • Manufactured by network formation crosslinking
    with the use of polyols
  • This plastic can degrade by hydrolysis

19
Polyester Resin Cont.
  • Made by the Artist before use
  • - Fillers Color (pigments), texture (sand,
    gravel)
  • 39.99 for 1 gal to 129.99 for 5 gal
  • One example of use is in bonded bronze
  • - Grounded bronze added to polyester mix to
    give the appearance of cast bronze

20
                                        The
Thinker   by Auguste Rodin In bonded bronze  
                                                  
                                                  
             
21
Epoxy
  • Created in a two step process
  • - step growth polymerization
  • - the molecular weight is then increased in a
    curing step, reacted with an anhydride

22
Epoxy Cont.
  • Thermoset hardens when a catalyst is added or
    heat is applied
  • High chemical and corrosion resistance
  • Brittle and high moisture absorption
  • 23.99 for 1 qt. to 59.99 for 1 gal.
  • This is another plastic created by the artist

23
Epoxy Cont.
  • Used to create form through molding
  • - a mold is created by clay epoxy is then
    applied to mold and then allowed to dry

24
                        Red Sculpture  By
Gerard BowlesMaterials are epoxy and polyester
resins                                        
                                                  
                        

25
Acrylic Poly(methyl-methacrylate)
  • Also known as Plexiglas A Trademark of Rohm
    Haas Co
  • Free-radical Polymerization
  • Thermoplastic, amorphous
  • Resistant to acid and environmental deterioration

26
Acrylic Cont.
  • Susceptible to thermal degradation by
    depolymerization
  • - chain scission breaks backbone bonds, creates
    free radicals
  • Rigid, transparent, and shatter resistant
  • Easy to scratch

27
                            Diver By Sophie
Gal   Acrylic                                   
                                                  
                 
28
StyrofoamPolystyrene
  • Created by free radical polymerization
  • Thermoplastic
  • Vulnerable to photooxidative degradation
  • - ultraviolet radiation is absorbed and
    cleavage occurs along main chain and phenyl ring,
    creates carbonyl-group formation

29
Styrofoam Cont.
  • Creates a brittle and a yellowing of the plastic
  • 2 Cubic Feet 15.00 to 40 Cubic Feet 175.00
  • Used in lost form casting
  • - a foam sculpture is set into a sand mold the
    sand is packed tightly, then a molten metal is
    added to the mold

30
                                                  
                            An Unexpected
Surprise By LeRoy Wynne Lost foam casting in
Bronze                                          
                                                  
                      
31
Art Restoration
  • Varnish
  • - a solution that is made from synthetic or
    natural resins dissolved in organic solvents,
    after drying it creates a protective film on the
    surface.
  • Natural varnishes tend to yellow and darken with
    time, while synthetics tend not to yellow as
    quickly

32
Art Restoration Cont.
  • They have differing properties in gloss,
    durability, flexibility and protection
  • Acrylic varnishes and paints dry quickly and
    acrylic paint cracks less then oil based paint
  • The use of acrylic varnishes and paints can
    create problems however

33
Art Restoration Cont.
  • Acrylic varnishes and paints have a glass
    transition temperature at or below room
    temperature
  • They will always be in a soft state
  • - easy to damage
  • - they collect dirt and dust giving the
  • work a dirty appearance

34
Art Restoration Cont.
  • Should acrylic varnishes be applied to acrylic
    paints?
  • Many artists have insisted their works remain
    unvarnished
  • If the varnish ever has to be removed in the
    future the solvent used to remove the varnish
    would harm the painting

35
Modern PaintsPaint
36
  • Pigment can be considered, as an objective of a
    painting and medium is a means to an end. In
    order to serve the pigment well and to preserve
    the life of a painting, all media have to meet
    certain requirements. These requirements are
    follow
  • The medium must have enough transparency in
    itself and not to change the color of the
    pigment.

37
  • The medium should not discolor with age.
  • The medium should protect the pigment by forming
    a file while the paint go dries.
  • The film should allow for expansion and
    contracting of the paint caused by temperature
    and humidity changes so that the paint will not
    crack.
  • The medium should be a strong binder and it
    should maintain the adhesion for unlimited time.

38
Natural and Synthetic Binders (Resins)
  • Natural Resins
  • Oil and watercolor.
  • Used it as interior and exterior house
    paints by most artists.
  • Synthetic Resins
  • Acrylic and Vinyl.
  • Have a number of advantages over natural
    Resins. (i.e. quick drying time, reduced
    yellowing with time.)

39
Synthetic resin become available and have been
widely used through out the twentieth century
paints. They are
  • Nitro-cellulose (Pyroxylin)
  • Alkyd
  • Polyvinyl Acetate (PVA)
  • Acrylic

40
Properties of Nitro-cellulose
  • Quick drying time
  • Resoluble and create a thin layer in every
    application at all time
  • Tendency to become brittle therefore, not
    recommendable as an outstanding medium for
    painting
  • Has serious disadvantage for painting because it
    decomposes with time

41
Who used Nitro-cellulose and how they used it?
  • Jackson Pollock
  • Dripping paint on the horizontally place
    canvas.
  • His way of painting was different from usual
    techniques of painting.
  • David Alfaro Siqueiros
  • Claimed to be the first artist who used it as
    a painting material.
  • Used it as in unconventional way such as
    staining, dripping, and pouring fluid paint onto
    a support.

42
Alkyd
  • Is a polyester formed by reaction of polybasic
    organic, acids and polyhydric alcohols that
    become an ester linkage.
  • In 1927, the first oil modified alkyd was
    introduced into the paint market.
  • In 1940s, alkyd resin was introduced to the
    industry and household paint formulation.

43
  • The replacement of nitro-cellulose by alkyd house
    paint was not succeeded because of longer drying
    time and only give limited success in the
    artists paint market.

44
Who used Alkyd and how they used it?
  • Pablo Picasso was the most famous artist who
    worked with alkyd in his painting, house
    painting, and boat painting.
  • Many artists used house paint rather than
    artists paint because artists paint was
    expensive and often unavailable in market.
  • Other artists such as Willem de Kooning,
    Australian artist Sidney Nolan, Peter Blake, and
    Frank Stella used Alkyd in their career.

45
Alkyd
  • Gillian Ayres, Distillation 1959, oil and alkyd
    house paint on hardboard (1959).

46
Polyvinyl Acetate (PVA)
  • In 1930s, PVA first appear in paint market.
  • There are two kinds solution and emulsion form
    of PVA.
  • The solution form PVA gets dry easily by
    evaporation of solvent and much faster than alkyd
    oil paint.
  • The emulsion forms of PVA are not dissolved in
    water but dispersed in water.

47
  • The major advantage of the emulsion are shorter
    drying time and water is the main component in
    emulsions so that it can reduce the amount of
    organic solvent and strong odor.
  • A number of artists were used PVA emulsion in
    their paintings such as Alfred Duca, Bridget
    Riley and Kenneth Noland.
  • However, it did not give much success to those
    artists because of a very limited color range and
    the introduction of the quality acrylic emulsion
    to the artists.

48
PVA
  • Sidney Nolan, Woman and Billabong, 1957, PVA
    emulsion on hardboard.

49
Acrylic
  • Acrylic becomes widely used in 1930s.
  • Acrylic is the newest painting medium and has the
    advantages flexibility brighter colors.
  • Acrylic applications are waterproof when dry.
  • The first acrylic paint was known as Magna and is
    the best known of the acrylic solution range of
    paint.

50
  • The first artist acrylic emulsion paint was known
    as Liquitex.
  • Liquitex did not success in the market because it
    was thin and runny.
  • Acrylic emulsion paints are not much different to
    the PVA emulsion such as they can be thinned
    with water when wet, but cannot be re-dissolved
    in water once dried..
  • The significant feature of acrylic was the
    ability of reducing wrinkles while the painting
    was drying.

51
Acrylic and PVA
  • Kenneth Noland, Gift 1961-2, acrylic solution and
    PVA emulsion on canvas.

52
Acrylic
  • Helen Frankenthaler, The Bay 1963, acrylic on
    canvas. The Detroit Institute of Arts.

53
Conclusion
  • Polymers can be used in many different
    applications in art from architecture to paints.
  • Its versatility and properties offer durable and
    low cost.
  • They can offer the artist or designer different
    avenues for creating and design.
  • With the rapidly expansion of study in polymers,
    plastic is potentially used as an alternative
    material for art with its own unique freedom of
    expression.

54
References
1. Beck, James Art Restoration the Culture, the
Business and the Scandal, W.W. Norton, New York,
1996.   2. Faulkner, Ziegfeld Art Today, an
Introduction to the Fine and Functional Arts,
Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1956.   3.
Fried, Joel Polymer Science and Technology,
Prentice Hall, New York, 1995.   4. Newman,
Thelma R. Plastics as an Art Form, Chilton Book
Company, Philadelphia, 1969.
55
  • 5. Padovano, Anthony The Process of Sculpture,
    Doubleday and Company, Inc., New York, 1981.
  • 6. Smithsonian Center for Material Research and
    Education. Ed. A.B. NGadi. 2001. 24, March 2001.
    http//www.si.edu/scmre/
  • 7. Williams, Arthur Sculpture Technique Form
    Content, Davis Publications, Inc., Massachusetts,
    1995.
  • 8. Crook, Jo, Tom Learner, the impact of MODERN
    PAINTS, Watson-Guptill Publication, N.Y, 2000.
  • 9. Woody, Jr. R. O., Painting with Synthetic
    Media, Reinhold Publishing Corporation, N.Y.,
    1965.
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