Since I was gone camping last weekend I planned to work at the beach again on Monday, but that morning I was awakened by thunder and decided against it. Considering the next sculpture will be one of my most structurally challenging pieces I'm glad I'm taking a week to prepare for it. And in the meantime I've been working on this little sculpture, trying to figure out how plaster works so I can get a wax replica of it and eventually cast it in glass. It's such a time consuming process!
Friday, July 29, 2011
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
I decided not to work on Sunday since it was raining, but Monday turned out great! And the other thing about working on a weekday is that there were very few naughty children around. Someone even rescued Venus and put her on a piling as you can see and the new piece was actually left standing the next day. But how long will he last? Check out this cool site on the colossus of Ramesses II that I based this piece on. More info here about that ruler.
It was amazing to me, of the people that walked by, that not many were very familiar with the ancient Egyptian look. It's not a perfect replica, but am I that bad, or do people really need better art education? I hope you the reader use this chance to brush up on some of these references, you never know when it could come in handy at the next trivia night at the bar!

Monday, July 11, 2011
This Time, Above the Tideline
I don't think I've mentioned the title of this project yet, I'm calling it "This Too Shall Pass." The sculptures are made of a sand/clay mixture and are meant to be temporary. It is a comment on how humanity has attempted to make lasting monuments to either achievements or values (as we can assume the virtue of fecundity was valued around the 2nd millenium BCE when the Venus of Willendorf was created.) But the truth is none of the monuments we build will last forever. Eventually everything will succumb to Nature's changes just as these sculptures must fall and be taken out by the tide.

However, I think it an interesting development in this project to note that Nature can't possibly keep up with us humans. Even her inevitable destruction is not given a chance. As you can see, the very next morning I returned to photograph the progress of erosion and was surprised to find that destruction had been aided by what appeared to be many tiny little feet.

Sometimes I fear for the future of art.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
The Tidelands Project begins
For the Heaven and Earth Exhibition this year I was selected to make work at a new site- Shilshole Bay Beach. What I intend to do is go out each weekend and sculpt another piece based on famous works though out history. These pieces will be in chronological order, beginning here with one of the earliest known examples of sculpture, and eventually I'll replicate my way up through art history as I work my way up the beach. As these sculptures are made of sand and clay I intend them to be gradually washed away by the tide, just as time gradually washes away all of mankind's endeavors. Here you see the first of my installation: a Cycladic figure. There have been many of these figures found in the Cyclades isles and are dated from the third millennium BCE.
The very next day I went back to see what was left of it after a full tide cycle and a night of hard rain.
You can see that I'll have to adjust my building strategy if I want to have these "gradually" erode. But learning better methods and techniques of preservation was a challenge for our ancestors as it is for me today.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
GAS
The Glass Art Society just had their annual conference here in Seattle, so of course I had to go. I wasn't sure at first if it would be worth the money, but a full three days of inspiration and wonder has changed me for the better!
I also recently finished my first class in kiln casting and here are the results- beautiful things. I think I'll stick with this for a while. So many ideas, so much art to make, I love it!
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
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