Monday, 28 April 2014

Visual Development:



Reasoning:


Visuals:



Learning more about cases:


Most court cases that forensic science businesses receive contain violations of a high level, this means that throughout society they are aware of and seen through the news of the world. It is interesting to hear about the famous court cases from a very personal level, through looking at this examples I aim to interview people in the company of forensic science, to discover how they felt about certain cases and the methods they used to investigate each one. 



Another Business:

The words underlined on this correspond to my choice in career path, to advocate the relation between creativity and academic I wanted to show these equivalent words that have connection to both:

- designed: design
nouna plan or drawing produced to show the look and function or workings of a building,garment, or other object before it is made: he has just unveiled his design for the new museum.• mass noun ] the art or action of conceiving of and producing a plan or drawing ofsomething before it is made: good design can help the reader understand complicated information.• mass noun ] the arrangement of the features of an artefact, as produced from following a plan or drawing: inside, the design reverts to turn-of-the-century luxe.a decorative pattern: pottery with a lovely blue and white design.mass noun ] purpose or planning that exists behind an action, fact, or object: the appearance of design in the universe.
   - built: build 
  •  past and past participle of build
adjective(of a person) having a specified physical size or build: a slightly built woman.
  • verb (past and past participlebuilt |bɪltwith obj. ]
construct (something) by putting parts or material together: the ironworks were built in 1736.• commission, finance, and oversee the building of (something): the county council plans to build a bypass.• (build something in/intoincorporate something and make it a permanent part of a structure, system, or situation: engineers want to build in extra traction.• Computing compile (a program, database, index, etc.). you can build database applications without writing any code.make or become stronger or more intense: [ with obj. ] we built upconfidence in our abilities | [ no obj. ] the air of excited anticipation builds.• establish and develop (a business or situation) over a period of time: he'd built upthestore from nothing.• no obj. ] (build onuse as a basis for further development: Britain should build on the talents of its workforce.nounmass noun ] the proportions of a person's or animal's body: she was of medium height and slim build | [ in sing. ] he had an ideal build for a sprinter.the style or form of construction of something, especially a vehicle. the car's high specification and impressive build quality.Computing a compiled version of a program.  
These cross overs I would like to interpret in the form of using the methodology of forensics to experiment with my own practice. I plan to investigate the experiments and methods that are undertaken during a case, analysing backup data that is used for reference and training.   

Visuals:



Through my previous development of this project in university I used a small amount of photographs from the collection I produced on the first visit to Key Forensics. I intend to recall these photographs and exploit the variety I have to produced a more expansive body of work. 

The Cooperation:

This is the company that I will be producing the art work for, I have taken photographs of the whole site and the areas that I will be allowed to design in. These images will be referred to later in the blog, alongside some visuals representations that I produced of my samples imposed within the site. I plan to produce a full portfolio of these representations once my project ideas have been expanded and more developed, that will be shown to the site manager of Key Forensic to discuss a proposed action plan. 

Reasoning:

After re-evaluating my initial thoughts about the project, now having insight into the career choices I am astonished at how much knowledge is needed to pursue a job within forensic science. It has also made me consider the emotions that have to do dealt with surrounding that kind of job; forensic scientists that attend crime scenes on a regular basis will see terrible felonies that people have committed, such as murders and rapes, if I was to witness that sort of scene frequently it would be make cautious of my every move, making sure everything was safe, wanting to know where relatives are so I know they are safe. There's a lot of negativity to be processed and I think that this may lead to anxiety and depression amongst people working within forensic science. I plan to investigate this notion by interviewing members of the company that I am proposing to, to see if there are any emotional effects  that occur within this career. 

Quotation:

This quotation has been analysed due to its correspondence to my thoughts of engaging people into the cross overs that creative and academic subjects have and how developing creative ways to represent this helps people think alternatively about aspects within their lives.

Definition: