"You don't choose your family. They are God's gift to you as you are to them." Desmond Tutu







Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Fine Arts Puppet

Over the last few weeks we have been working on the puppet that Cerah is going to be using for the Fine Arts puppetry solo. District competition is next weekend in Grand Rapids so wish us luck with that.  For now I thought you might want to see the puppet. Before you do, though, let me explain how it's going to work otherwise you will be really confused.
The song Cerah is setting her routine to is City on the Hill by Casting Crowns. It talks about a city on a hill that once shown bright but then lost it's light because the city turned on itself. "The poets thought the dancers were shallow, the soldiers thought the poets were weak, the elders thought the young ones were foolish, and the rich man never heard the poor man speak." And so the city slowly fades away. "But it was the rhythm of the dancers that gave the poets life, it was the spirit of the poets that gave the soldiers strength to fight, it was the fire of the young ones, it was the wisdom of the old, it was the story of the poor man that needed to be told." And so they slowly come back and the city becomes strong again.


The first step was to cut out the seven panels that would comprise the city


Next, we made sure they would fit the way they should


After that Rob glued the panels onto some wood to make them firmer



And then attached that wood to a longer piece of wood that would then attach to gliders


Like this. He did it this way so that Cerah could move the panels back and forth


Once finished, he set them on a larger piece of wood to make sure they fit on there correctly


Then we took them apart and covered them with different fabrics to represent the various people in the song


And then we covered the main part of the city with orange and borrowed a puppet head from the church. We also painted all the wood black so that none of it would show


Everything was done so that it would work under black light. Once the fabric was done we started working on the smaller puppets and making a curtain on either side to hide the panels


Ballerina shoes to represent the dancers; a book and quill to represent the poets; outline of a soldier; rich man bent over from the weight of his money; a woman begging in the streets; an old man sitting on a park bench; and an ipod to represent the young people.




Here's the finished product under black light - this is what the audience will see
 
Left side view


Middle view

Right side view


Cerah with her puppet


During the song she can turn the puppets around and they will disappear in the black lights


The panels slide out and are hidden behind the curtain


Cerah moving one of the panels


Now all that is left is the main puppet.


At the end she can bring them all back again.



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