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Kiln-Cast Glass Art Tiles

My first group of kiln-cast glass art tiles are available now.  These are solid glass tiles which can be used architecturally in a tiled wall or displayed on a stand as art.

Kiln casting is a lost wax process.  Each tile is first sculpted in clay, then I make a silicon rubber mold so it can be cast  in wax.  Then I make a refractory mold so the tile can be cast  in glass.  The kiln fires them for about two days.  Its a detailed process with many more steps than you would want to read about.  I like to let the work speak for itself.

Contact me for prices.

Its exciting to finally have a glass kiln in my own studio.  (coming soon: small sculptures and recycled glass!)

Turn Around in Bronze

Do you remember looking up at the sky when you were a kid?  Did you ever spin around and around to make yourself dizzy until you fell down?  It is only for a moment and perhaps the next moment will not be so joyful…..

I began working on Turn Around in January of this year.  Ten months later she is finished in bronze and ready to ship to Broomfield Colorado.

Turn Around was cast at the Artworks Foundry in Berkeley CA.,  and is now headed for the First Bank Performing Arts Center in Broomfield Co. ( updates coming soon)  where she will be displayed for about a year.   If you are in the area take a look, and let me know what you think.

Because she will be displayed outdoors, I needed a simple patina that will last in the elements. This is a simple ferric and liver of sulphur patina.

Turn Around is part of my Time and Space series. It is about the dizzy connection between today, tomorrow and yesterday. There is giddy joy and a spirit of hope and the sadness of change and loss along the way.

 

 

Beginnings and Endings

They say all endings are really beginnings too.  Its always a little sad when I finish the modeling stage of a sculpture.   Its exciting too to think of how the finished work will be realized in a permanent material.

My sculpture-in-progress Turn Around is ready to be cast in bronze. In fact the mold making has already begun.  She is also ready to find a home.

This intimately scaled work is suited to a small park, pocket park, garden, courtyard or atrium.  Turn Around is 50 inches tall and aproximately 30 inches in diameter.

 

recognition for Light

I’m pleased to announce that my sculpture entitled Light, in kiln cast glass was awarded the silver medal in the three dimensional  art category, of the Night of a Hundred Angels exhibition.  The show benefits the Make A Wish foundation and is sponsored by the Whelan Gallery in Laguna Beach CA. http://whelanartgalleries.com/

Light will appear in the show’s catalogue available through Whelan Galleries.

Rendered from a living model, Light is a very special piece in my Time and Space series.  From start to finish it was two years in the making.  Creating Light involved making a temporary kiln and many months of patient cold glass working after the risky process casting.  I won’t get into all the technical details, but here are a few pictures of the process:

Turn Around

At last I have a name for the work:  Turn Around.

This is the final stage of clay work.  I’m adding a low relief along the base and finishing surface details.  The relief  gives the viewer some things to think about: a cast off sock, crayons, a mobile phone…items from her past and future fall away into the weeds around her.

This little girl is looking for a home.  I hope to find her outdoors where she belongs someday.


Strands of Insanity

How To Sculpt Hair in Clay

Detail from "Turn Around"

Hair is impossible to sculpt. It’s not just difficult but also completely impossible. Anyone who tells you otherwise has simply never attempted it.

That said, here are the few things I have learned while attempting the impossible:

  1. Hair is both chaotic and logical. It must follow the laws of physics without appearing to to ever follow any rules of any kind. Just ask a hair dresser.
  2. Let random things happen. Too much order and it will not resemble hair.
  3. Look up chaos theory. It will not help you to render hair from clay but it will help you to understand why you are failing so miserably.
  4. Think about spaghetti and cupcakes. Think about words like “undulate”. Think about super string theory or the series of events that brought you to this place in your life but whatever you do, do not think about hair.
  5. Listen to Thelonious Monk. Mozart is another option but do not even think about Bach, for he is not your friend in this madness.
  6. Approach the rendering of hair from a place of deep meditative humility. Know that you are walking in the footsteps of some of the greatest artists in history and they struggled too. Look the work of Bernini for extra humility.
  7. If you want to see your work through the eyes of others, take a picture and look at that. I apologize in advance for the shock of it.

So, that’s all I know. That, and these words of my mentor Walter Erlebacher : “take courage, art is big”.

poetry of form

“There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all of time, this expression is unique.” – Martha Graham

“Body language is a very powerful tool. We had body language before we had speech, and apparently, 80% of what you understand in a conversation is read through the body, not the words.” —Deborah Bull

“Life is about moving, it’s about change. And when things stop doing that they’re dead.”— Twyla Tharp

“Gestures are a language. Every moment of your existence you are a living poem of movement…….if only there is someone there to read you.”  —Georgianna Krieger

 

the figure in motion

Here is where things get interesting , for me at least.  With the initial figure blocked out its time to trace the motion of the figure through time/space.

I think about the mechanics of the joints of the skeleton as well as the contraction of muscles to plot out the movement.  The human body is a beautiful combination of structural form and it follows certain laws of physics.  These can be learned through the study of structural anatomy.  Some years ago, when I worked in stop motion animation, I also studied movement by taking photographs in quick succession of the movement in question.

Form in clay

 

the gesture begins here, knowledge of human anatomy is the key to blocking out the volumes

this is just a starting place, the movement will follow

first I plot the volumes of the primary figure

With the armature secure and sealed from moisture it’s time to sculpt!   I begin by adding fistfuls of clay and pounding them onto the armature with wooden block tools.   These tools are home made in various sizes but the basic shape is a rectangular block with a 35 degree angle at one end. Why 35 degrees?  Because there are no 45 degree angles in the human form, 35 is much more useful.

I’m using a water based clay formulated to dry more slowly than most, called WED clay.  This is the first time I have used this particular clay which I am told was developed by Disney.  So far so good.

I block out the volumes of the central figure first.  I will then create the moving volumes by plotting out the progression of the basic volumes through space/time.

It’s important not to add details at this time and work around the whole form.  This stage flies by.  Finally the piece takes shape and turns from being just a thought in my head, to something tangible.

I’m still working with a proportion system and thinking all the time about composition.   This is when the gesture of the piece comes alive and is always my favorite stage.

Many artists like this rough stage so much they just stop here.  Why go on?  I go on to deepen the connection between the viewer and the subject.  I go on because it is in the details that the sublime is revealed.  I go on because I have more to say.

What is Art?

What Is Art

The American art world is a chaotic soup of art that exists to shock and entertain, to speak to personal stories, limited ideas and temporary displays. In our context, it is my observation the average person no longer understands the difference between art and design, between art and decoration, between art and craft, between art and entertainment. Try it, go ask someone to tell you the difference.

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