Outside Inspiration: Challenge Yourself

January 2, 2015

gil bruvel flow series

I know, for some readers, Friday is their least favorite blog day because it is the one day I do not post something made with polymer. But in my opinion, these posts are some of the most important posts I show to you because you have to stretch your mind to find the inspiration within the characteristics of these non-polymer pieces, not just see how others are working with our favorite material. I often wonder how many of you, dear readers, have created something or changed something in a polymer piece of yours because of something you’ve seen that wasn’t made from polymer. I’m hoping it is the majority of you. But if you are one that has not or don’t usually look to other kinds of materials for new ideas and imagery, may I suggest that this year you try to pull something from non-polymer work?

I guess I could really have pulled anything for today’s post, but this amazing piece by the fabulous Gil Bruvel stood out because it is not only something that could be accomplished with polymer but because the artist himself is trying something different (so he’s possibly influenced by another art form as well). This bust looks realistic in some intangible manner but is made up completely of lines. The energy of the lines is where the feeling of its liveliness comes from, the feeling that this could be a realistic representation of another person, not just in looks but in expression. I have seen drawings like this, even recall form-defining line drawing exercises in art school not unlike this, so I wonder if he got the idea for his “Flow” series from drawing. A sculptor borrowing from not just another medium but one the works in another dimension. Every art form, every form in life, can be inspiration.

So what do think? Will you meet the challenge? I’ll even bring the work to you to ponder. Or you can try other fabulous blogs like the Daily Art Muse, This is Colossal, or the Wearable Art Blog.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or an issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front    PolymerArts Kaleidoscope     lpedit

Not Polymer and Not a Gourd so …

December 24, 2014

6171f7b83dbd2d9643e720851f260ad7

I know, I know … this is not polymer, but there was some question about that as it was posted on a few Pinterest boards under polymer. And that colorful inlay could be polymer, right? It could, but it’s not. It’s painted. The reason it was popping up under polymer searches was because it was posted to the polymer tutorial site, claylessons.com, in a message posted to encourage people to visit the Daily Art Muse blog (let’s see how many plugs and links we can fit into one blog post, shall we?). So there is the polymer connection.

But why am I featuring a non-polymer piece today? Because it’s nearly Christmas and if I can’t break some rules now, when can I? Well, yes, I do break rules on occasion for no reason at all, but let’s say this is because it’s a holiday week. And because this piece is gorgeous. It is all carved wood by wood artist, Joey Richardson. The detail is amazing. The form and intricacy are so fluid and natural you might wonder if it’s not alive. It also reminded me of my favorite gourd artist Mark Doolittle (we needed another plug and link here, right?).

But wait, there’s more! More incredible work like this that is (although more links will certainly happen).  After holding onto this, waiting for the right themed week to share it in for nearly a year, I finally found out who the unattributed artist was, opened her site and just got lost there.  I don’t know how Joey has the patience or hasn’t ruined her fingers with all this fine carving, but I am grateful that she does. What a treat. Treat yourself as well by heading over to her site and be sure to read her About page. Her feeling about her sources of inspiration really fit the season.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front      TPA Blog Newsletter Ad  ShadesofClay 1014 v2  lpedit  

Outside Inspiration: Muses from Other Art Forms

April 25, 2014

Another blog you really should be following is the wonderful Daily Art Muse (DAM) which also has a monthly version sent as a newsletter (MAM). Susan Lomuto doesn’t actually post daily but her intermittent posts are always intriguing. I have found many of our Outside Inspiration artists thanks to her discoveries shared on this blog.

For instance, I would not likely have found the wonderful work of Phiona Richards who creates jewelry and sculpture from old books, beads and textiles. Just look at this wonderful pin. I love the play on the idea that books are filled with “pearls of wisdom” making this both a visual and metaphorical delight.

8651389515_5c73b2b0d0

With the folded polymer trend these days, Phiona’s work is a great source of polymer inspiration and ideas for complex folds. See more of her work on her website and then be sure to get signed up for DAM and MAM. Susan does feature a lot of polymer art on her blog but more importantly she features very different craft art in general, because we cannot grow on the inspiration of polymer artists alone.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

Blog2 -2014-02Feb-5   Millefiori eggs   14P1 cover Fnl

Outside Inspiration: Polymer Lends Color to Kauri Wood

October 18, 2013

Today’s featured artwork isn’t completely an outside inspiration since polymer is involved, but the primary material certainly is. I found these pods on the Daily Art Muse blog. They are a collaboration between Kauri woodturning artist Alby Hall and polymer pen artist Toni Ransfield.

hall_edenseed1and2

 

The collaborative work itself is quite beautiful, but in researching for this post I became rather fascinated by the wood itself, its history and the long, arduous process of preparing it. This is no ordinary wood. Kauri trees are among the oldest and biggest tress in the world. The wood Alby uses is actually Ancient Kauri, a wood recovered from swamps in his native New Zealand where the trees had fallen some 45,000 years before. Ancient Kauri is the oldest workable wood in the world and is also considered one of the most difficult to work with, primarily due to the drying and finishing that is required. It is a very soft wood with a tight grain but no sap, since that was dissolved in the swamp waters ages ago. This makes for some very different working characteristics. If you are as fascinated as I am by unusual materials and the processes required to gain and work with them, you’d enjoy reading about this wood on the Ancient Kauri website.

Alby himself doesn’t seem to have a website, but do take a moment to look at his other pod forms on the DAM blog (a blog I very highly recommend you follow if you don’t already). And then stop on over to Toni’s website to see more of Toni’s beautifully caned and finished pieces.

Loving Monsters

September 30, 2012

This may not seem much related to polymer or art, but I did find this on the site of an artist who works with polymer among many other things. Æ(Alexis) Pierre-Louis lives in Seattle and creates jewelry, paintings, sculpture, installations, video poetry, and writings. I discovered Alexis through a post on Daily Art Muse (which you should check out for great artistic inspiration) and although I do like the rings shown in this post, it was the story on her blog page (no longer being updated) that really got to me:

When Alexis was a little girl, she was afraid of a lot of things, especially the dark. After a bedtime story, her father would kiss her on the forehead and turn off the light. Within minutes she’d be howling and would dive into her parents’ bed for comfort. Naturally this situation could not last long. One day, instead of her usual bedtime story, Alexis’s father told her this,

Imagine how small and dull our lives would be if we allowed ourselves to be ruled by fear. Very small indeed. It’s a big, scary world out there, sometimes people can be cruel, and circumstances can seem larger than our imagination so that our dreams become nightmares filled with big, scary monsters. It’s natural to be afraid sometimes; the trick is not to become stuck in fear, and there is only one cure for that: love. Fear is like a big, scary monster. Love kills all the monsters. So the next time you see a monster, give him some milk and cookies, tuck him into bed, tell him a bedtime story, give him a kiss on the forehead, and say ‘I love you’, and watch your monster turn into your friend.

Fear is part of our lives. Maybe more so as artists because we face an unknown every time we sit down to our studio table. What will we make? How will it turn out? Will I succeed in creating what I envision? Will it be good enough? These fears can cause us to freeze up. But what or who are we really afraid of?

We are afraid of ourselves … afraid of our abilities and inabilities, of how we will deal with being judged be it by others or by our own person. So, I think Alexis’ father’s idea is great. When you are afraid, give your monster — yourself — some milk and cookies and say “I love you.” And then go and play with your clay.

 

Outside Inspiration: Challenge Yourself

January 2, 2015
Posted in

gil bruvel flow series

I know, for some readers, Friday is their least favorite blog day because it is the one day I do not post something made with polymer. But in my opinion, these posts are some of the most important posts I show to you because you have to stretch your mind to find the inspiration within the characteristics of these non-polymer pieces, not just see how others are working with our favorite material. I often wonder how many of you, dear readers, have created something or changed something in a polymer piece of yours because of something you’ve seen that wasn’t made from polymer. I’m hoping it is the majority of you. But if you are one that has not or don’t usually look to other kinds of materials for new ideas and imagery, may I suggest that this year you try to pull something from non-polymer work?

I guess I could really have pulled anything for today’s post, but this amazing piece by the fabulous Gil Bruvel stood out because it is not only something that could be accomplished with polymer but because the artist himself is trying something different (so he’s possibly influenced by another art form as well). This bust looks realistic in some intangible manner but is made up completely of lines. The energy of the lines is where the feeling of its liveliness comes from, the feeling that this could be a realistic representation of another person, not just in looks but in expression. I have seen drawings like this, even recall form-defining line drawing exercises in art school not unlike this, so I wonder if he got the idea for his “Flow” series from drawing. A sculptor borrowing from not just another medium but one the works in another dimension. Every art form, every form in life, can be inspiration.

So what do think? Will you meet the challenge? I’ll even bring the work to you to ponder. Or you can try other fabulous blogs like the Daily Art Muse, This is Colossal, or the Wearable Art Blog.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or an issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front    PolymerArts Kaleidoscope     lpedit

Read More

Not Polymer and Not a Gourd so …

December 24, 2014
Posted in

6171f7b83dbd2d9643e720851f260ad7

I know, I know … this is not polymer, but there was some question about that as it was posted on a few Pinterest boards under polymer. And that colorful inlay could be polymer, right? It could, but it’s not. It’s painted. The reason it was popping up under polymer searches was because it was posted to the polymer tutorial site, claylessons.com, in a message posted to encourage people to visit the Daily Art Muse blog (let’s see how many plugs and links we can fit into one blog post, shall we?). So there is the polymer connection.

But why am I featuring a non-polymer piece today? Because it’s nearly Christmas and if I can’t break some rules now, when can I? Well, yes, I do break rules on occasion for no reason at all, but let’s say this is because it’s a holiday week. And because this piece is gorgeous. It is all carved wood by wood artist, Joey Richardson. The detail is amazing. The form and intricacy are so fluid and natural you might wonder if it’s not alive. It also reminded me of my favorite gourd artist Mark Doolittle (we needed another plug and link here, right?).

But wait, there’s more! More incredible work like this that is (although more links will certainly happen).  After holding onto this, waiting for the right themed week to share it in for nearly a year, I finally found out who the unattributed artist was, opened her site and just got lost there.  I don’t know how Joey has the patience or hasn’t ruined her fingers with all this fine carving, but I am grateful that she does. What a treat. Treat yourself as well by heading over to her site and be sure to read her About page. Her feeling about her sources of inspiration really fit the season.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front      TPA Blog Newsletter Ad  ShadesofClay 1014 v2  lpedit  

Read More

Outside Inspiration: Muses from Other Art Forms

April 25, 2014
Posted in

Another blog you really should be following is the wonderful Daily Art Muse (DAM) which also has a monthly version sent as a newsletter (MAM). Susan Lomuto doesn’t actually post daily but her intermittent posts are always intriguing. I have found many of our Outside Inspiration artists thanks to her discoveries shared on this blog.

For instance, I would not likely have found the wonderful work of Phiona Richards who creates jewelry and sculpture from old books, beads and textiles. Just look at this wonderful pin. I love the play on the idea that books are filled with “pearls of wisdom” making this both a visual and metaphorical delight.

8651389515_5c73b2b0d0

With the folded polymer trend these days, Phiona’s work is a great source of polymer inspiration and ideas for complex folds. See more of her work on her website and then be sure to get signed up for DAM and MAM. Susan does feature a lot of polymer art on her blog but more importantly she features very different craft art in general, because we cannot grow on the inspiration of polymer artists alone.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

Blog2 -2014-02Feb-5   Millefiori eggs   14P1 cover Fnl

Read More

Outside Inspiration: Polymer Lends Color to Kauri Wood

October 18, 2013
Posted in

Today’s featured artwork isn’t completely an outside inspiration since polymer is involved, but the primary material certainly is. I found these pods on the Daily Art Muse blog. They are a collaboration between Kauri woodturning artist Alby Hall and polymer pen artist Toni Ransfield.

hall_edenseed1and2

 

The collaborative work itself is quite beautiful, but in researching for this post I became rather fascinated by the wood itself, its history and the long, arduous process of preparing it. This is no ordinary wood. Kauri trees are among the oldest and biggest tress in the world. The wood Alby uses is actually Ancient Kauri, a wood recovered from swamps in his native New Zealand where the trees had fallen some 45,000 years before. Ancient Kauri is the oldest workable wood in the world and is also considered one of the most difficult to work with, primarily due to the drying and finishing that is required. It is a very soft wood with a tight grain but no sap, since that was dissolved in the swamp waters ages ago. This makes for some very different working characteristics. If you are as fascinated as I am by unusual materials and the processes required to gain and work with them, you’d enjoy reading about this wood on the Ancient Kauri website.

Alby himself doesn’t seem to have a website, but do take a moment to look at his other pod forms on the DAM blog (a blog I very highly recommend you follow if you don’t already). And then stop on over to Toni’s website to see more of Toni’s beautifully caned and finished pieces.

Read More

Loving Monsters

September 30, 2012
Posted in

This may not seem much related to polymer or art, but I did find this on the site of an artist who works with polymer among many other things. Æ(Alexis) Pierre-Louis lives in Seattle and creates jewelry, paintings, sculpture, installations, video poetry, and writings. I discovered Alexis through a post on Daily Art Muse (which you should check out for great artistic inspiration) and although I do like the rings shown in this post, it was the story on her blog page (no longer being updated) that really got to me:

When Alexis was a little girl, she was afraid of a lot of things, especially the dark. After a bedtime story, her father would kiss her on the forehead and turn off the light. Within minutes she’d be howling and would dive into her parents’ bed for comfort. Naturally this situation could not last long. One day, instead of her usual bedtime story, Alexis’s father told her this,

Imagine how small and dull our lives would be if we allowed ourselves to be ruled by fear. Very small indeed. It’s a big, scary world out there, sometimes people can be cruel, and circumstances can seem larger than our imagination so that our dreams become nightmares filled with big, scary monsters. It’s natural to be afraid sometimes; the trick is not to become stuck in fear, and there is only one cure for that: love. Fear is like a big, scary monster. Love kills all the monsters. So the next time you see a monster, give him some milk and cookies, tuck him into bed, tell him a bedtime story, give him a kiss on the forehead, and say ‘I love you’, and watch your monster turn into your friend.

Fear is part of our lives. Maybe more so as artists because we face an unknown every time we sit down to our studio table. What will we make? How will it turn out? Will I succeed in creating what I envision? Will it be good enough? These fears can cause us to freeze up. But what or who are we really afraid of?

We are afraid of ourselves … afraid of our abilities and inabilities, of how we will deal with being judged be it by others or by our own person. So, I think Alexis’ father’s idea is great. When you are afraid, give your monster — yourself — some milk and cookies and say “I love you.” And then go and play with your clay.

 

Read More
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