Mixed Media Full of Grace

March 25, 2013

Mixed media is part of the theme of the next issue of The Polymer Arts (coming out in May) so my recent research has been focused on how polymer is combined with other mediums. Here we have one of my favorite mixed media and polymer artists, Grace Stokes. Grace is not afraid to combine whatever works to create the designs she has in mind. Can you guess what she has combined here?

LavendarSonata

Chances are polymer is one, right? (Being that is what I usually talk about here, that’s a pretty sure bet.) So yes, it’s that and sterling silver. That’s all she lists. Can that beautiful cabachon in the center be polymer?

Not only does Grace mix materials, she mixes approaches to creating her pieces. She uses traditional metal craft, polymer craft, bead making and CAD drawing. Yes, technology is something she likes to use in order to create the forms she wants to cast in precious metals. And why not? If it helps produce your vision, there is no good reason not to use it.

Creating is not about the medium. It is about the artist, what they want to create, what they want to share. What you use (and how you use it) to get there is of little importance as long as the design and vision is authentic you.

Mixing with Mokume

January 24, 2013

Today we’re going to sit back and admire a great combination of materials. These bracelets are mokume gane polymer bangle bases with moving add-ons in the form of pmc, sterling silver, brass, and bronze rings that transverse the bangle as the wearer moves.

mokumebracelores

Celie Fago  explains her rather lengthy process on the IPCA Synergy 2 page I found these on: “These bracelets evolve, in fits and starts, over the course of years. They mix many media and processes; they are material collaborations. I work in relays: I make the polymer bracelets, then the embellishments: I put them on the bracelets, take them off, move them from one to another …”

This brings up a couple thoughts. One … no work of art is ever really complete, is it? I think we could tweak and changes pieces forever, always seeing ways to improve or change them. The real talent is knowing when to stop.

The other thing that hit me about what she said was that these are “material collaborations”. We think about people collaborating but yes, why not consider how materials can “help” each other not just how they can fit together? In these bracelets, the variety of metal seems to actually increase the flash and depth of texture in the mokume gane. The metals and polymer are working together in a synergistic manner to make the parts, which seen on their own would not be so very impressive, integral and intriguing points in the whole of the composition.

Speaking of Synergy … if you plan on going to Synergy 3 in March, be sure to come and find The Polymer Arts in the vendors room and join me for my workshops and discussions on writing for the craft arts market, centralizing polymer information, and a interview panel of publishers chatting about what we do and why we do it for you. See you there!

 

 

Mixed Media Full of Grace

March 25, 2013
Posted in

Mixed media is part of the theme of the next issue of The Polymer Arts (coming out in May) so my recent research has been focused on how polymer is combined with other mediums. Here we have one of my favorite mixed media and polymer artists, Grace Stokes. Grace is not afraid to combine whatever works to create the designs she has in mind. Can you guess what she has combined here?

LavendarSonata

Chances are polymer is one, right? (Being that is what I usually talk about here, that’s a pretty sure bet.) So yes, it’s that and sterling silver. That’s all she lists. Can that beautiful cabachon in the center be polymer?

Not only does Grace mix materials, she mixes approaches to creating her pieces. She uses traditional metal craft, polymer craft, bead making and CAD drawing. Yes, technology is something she likes to use in order to create the forms she wants to cast in precious metals. And why not? If it helps produce your vision, there is no good reason not to use it.

Creating is not about the medium. It is about the artist, what they want to create, what they want to share. What you use (and how you use it) to get there is of little importance as long as the design and vision is authentic you.

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Mixing with Mokume

January 24, 2013
Posted in

Today we’re going to sit back and admire a great combination of materials. These bracelets are mokume gane polymer bangle bases with moving add-ons in the form of pmc, sterling silver, brass, and bronze rings that transverse the bangle as the wearer moves.

mokumebracelores

Celie Fago  explains her rather lengthy process on the IPCA Synergy 2 page I found these on: “These bracelets evolve, in fits and starts, over the course of years. They mix many media and processes; they are material collaborations. I work in relays: I make the polymer bracelets, then the embellishments: I put them on the bracelets, take them off, move them from one to another …”

This brings up a couple thoughts. One … no work of art is ever really complete, is it? I think we could tweak and changes pieces forever, always seeing ways to improve or change them. The real talent is knowing when to stop.

The other thing that hit me about what she said was that these are “material collaborations”. We think about people collaborating but yes, why not consider how materials can “help” each other not just how they can fit together? In these bracelets, the variety of metal seems to actually increase the flash and depth of texture in the mokume gane. The metals and polymer are working together in a synergistic manner to make the parts, which seen on their own would not be so very impressive, integral and intriguing points in the whole of the composition.

Speaking of Synergy … if you plan on going to Synergy 3 in March, be sure to come and find The Polymer Arts in the vendors room and join me for my workshops and discussions on writing for the craft arts market, centralizing polymer information, and a interview panel of publishers chatting about what we do and why we do it for you. See you there!

 

 

Read More
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