Hanging out in Graveyards

I took a trip to old San Fernando Cemetery yesterday morning to visit faces from the past. Besides the wonderful sculptures, there are always families, mostly in pickup trucks, driving slowly along the narrow paths in the cemetery, stopping at ancestors’ graves and getting out for a few minutes to look, talk and sometimes put fresh (plastic) flowers near the headstones. Here is one of yesterday’s favorite faces:


Saying Goodby to Creations

Yesterday was pickup day at La Vida Gallery – I brought home a couple of large pieces that were not sold at my show and six pieces that were. Friends had asked if I would pick up their purchases. They’re wrapped and ready to go – sigh, it’s harder than I thought now that they are back in my hands. But at least I can visit them!

Ann Pearce Just Keeps On Creating

I went by Ann’s shop today and saw some of the new work she’s done with the faces – she just keeps getting better and better. Here are a few of the new ones – they look spectacular “in person.”

Open Studio at Jan’s

This should be fun and different – I’ve never had an open studio somewhere else, but I’m looking forward to it. I’m planning to offer a free gift! Stay tuned.

Transplendent Collage

That’s the name and theme I’ve decided on for a workshop I’m giving to a group of teachers in August – we will uses transparent media and discuss transcendent ideas take the ordinary object to the extraordinary by juxtaposing it with the creative and unexpected.
Included in this would be

  • Transparency and layers
  • Time travel combinations
  • Juxtaposed metaphors
  • Transformations
  • Morphs
I think that’s what I tried to do with this series in the La Vida show.

“I feel transcendant and splendid. I feel transplendant.”
from the akaruihito blog, 2006

 

Summer Workshop Videos –

These workshop have been so much fun – yesterday was the last one until August 19th when I’ll offer a two-part workshop with Ann Pearce – I’ll post the brochure here in a few days, but other classes will include Collage on Canvas and and Card and Votive workshop – stay tuned!

From Sunday, June 24th


From Sunday, June 17th

Adornments and Such

I was making some face shards for Ann Pearce’s jewelry designs yesterday and decided to try some little flat clay pendants. They remind me of game tiles or little ancient book covers. Here are three of them, just out of the kiln this morning – I’m still experimenting, but so far I like them and can also see them as part of my mixed media paper and earthenware collages. The one on the far right has gold leaf added. The others are finished with walnut ink and iridescent mica powder.

Coals to Newcastle?

I stopped by Ann Pearce’s jewelry shop to deliver some little shard faces and I was wowed by what she had done with the shard face in this necklace. I didn’t have the iridescent leather, the beads or any of the other things that (besides the face I had made) gave it such special appeal. So I bought it! Actually, I traded it for more faces. When I wear it, I get tons of compliments and questions. Malcolm, the trainer at the gym next door to Ann’s, saw it and said “That brother has a lot on his soul.”  Ann gets the credit for the design, but the face with the soul started out in my studio. Thanks, Ann, for elevating these little guys to such a fine status!

Second Summer Sunday Workshop

Yesterday’s votive candle card workshop was so much fun – many creative ideas and many different (but perfect) answers to the design project. Thanks to everyone for coming to play in the studio. Here’s a short video:

Art Pix

Here are a few shots from galleries I visit on my trip to DC/Rehoboth. I photographed the works for various reasons, not to emulate but to swipe one or two ideas that I liked a lot. Can you guess what I liked about each one? Can you guess which one is food? The most amazing show I saw was called Ghost Factories by JS Adams at the WardEllinger Gallery.
Here are the pics – none of Adams’ work cause I was just to entranced looking at the work itself – inkjet prints on shellacked manilla paper.