Out on the Street

Every time I visit Cornelia Brockstedt’s website, I just get lost. Her work holds a kind of mysterious curiosity for me. Where did these images come from? Just how does she view the world that she comes up with these unexpected compositions? She has a series called “Street Life” which I find particularly fascinating. There is a mix of organic and man-made in most of it–very much reminiscent of a city street with its asphalt, concrete, and pipes, but among these intentional and planned structures, nature is moving back in to reclaim what once was its territory.

This brooch is easily the most curious of the series. The texture of the emerging vegetation is in all the pieces of this series; but this one, due to the rather aquatic formations, seems more alive and even a little alien. It’s eerie and beautifully fascinating, don’t you think?

shelter

 

And because I can’t resist, here is the other end of the spectrum on her Street Life series. This pendant’s imagery is a bit more easily recognizable–grass growing in between paving stones–which may sound like a rather mundane subject matter; but as you can see, it’s not in the least bit mundane in this presentation.

searching_for_balance_home

The other thing about Cornelia’s work is that it shows that she really knows how to take inspiration from other artists and make it her own. She has quite a few pieces listed with credit given to other artists that she learned from; but even though the technique of these other artists is (more or less) apparent, the work is usually quite different from the work of her teachers.

In The Polymer Arts, I decided from the start to focus on technique rather than project tutorials or how-to type articles. These are supposed to give readers new skills and techniques that they can then take to the studio and morph or blend into their own original pieces. Sometimes it is hard to separate the technique from the design when what you learn is taught as a specific project. Well, if you want some excellent examples of how that is done, take a good long look through Cornelia’s website. Some transformations of techniques are more detached from the master artist’s usual designs than others, but they all look to be developed in a way that still reflects something of Cornelia’s aesthetic. And that is precisely what should be done with skills learned in any workshop or from any book.

Sage

3 Comments

  1. Cornelia Brockstedt on September 5, 2013 at 11:12 am

    Thank you so much for showing my work here. I’m really honored by your wonderful words and I feel understood in my artistic expression!



  2. Shirley Rufener on September 5, 2013 at 1:57 pm

    I just have to say that Cornelia’s work in polymer is today my favorite artist that you have featured on TDPA blog! Her Flickr site is full of some of the best designs and true “ART” i have seen in polymer. It’s not only beautiful and aesthetically pleasing to the eye, but her newest pieces “Street Art” truly capture what life is in the city! I will be following your work Cornelia, it inspires me greatly!



  3. Cornelia Brockstedt on September 6, 2013 at 6:54 am

    Wow – thank you, Shirley! It’s a pleasure to me.



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