Monday, March 1, 2010

Slim Barrett


Slim Barrett is a jewellery designer. I am not sure what other jewellery designs he does, but I am fascinated by his style of mesh-like jewellery like this one. For my idea of creating rubbish jewellery, I want it to appear similarly to the mesh like look by Slim Barrett.

Kate Durham

'Kate Durham finds both the materials and the inspiration for her art on beaches and the building sites of inner city Melbourne. Bits of metal, old plates, beer cans, and glass bottles are metamorphosed into jewellery. Describing the materials and her creations as "nothing special", Kate sees her pieces as strong statements against the transitory nature of objects in this society. She likes "the approach of African tribes who look at objects in new ways and turn them into decorative things when we are ready to discard them".'

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Subodh Gupta Images


'Line of Control' (1964)


'Spill' (2007) Made with stainless steel utensils




Minam Apang

Works by Minam Apang:


(click to enlarge)

Botanical Illustration


Botanical illustration is more scientific than artistic. It must illustrate a plant in great detail and precision. Accuracy is an important theme when it comes to botanical illustration rather than aesthetics. However, the result is visually pleasing at the same time as being scientifically valuable and precise. The history of this art is a development of a relationship between art and science.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Irving Penn


> Penn printed his own pictures using Platinum rather than Silver. This produced 'velvety tones' and is very permanent. However, it is very time consumuing, requiring precise control and impecable preparation.



>Penn acknowledged decay by photographing street debris such as chewing gum, cigarette butts, and later, animal skulls.





> John Szarkowski, Museum of Modern Art's director of photography wrote, "The grace, wit, and inventiveness of his pattern making, the lively and surprising elegance of his line, and his sensitivity to the character, the idiosyncratic humours, of light make Penn's pictures, even the slighter ones, a pleasure for our eyes."

In this quote I feel that when Szarkowski states that 'even the slighter ones, [are] a pleasure for our eyes' I think that this relates to my perception of Alchemy (the transformation of ugliness to beauty or ordinary to extraordinary) as Penn manages to turn simple images, and sometimes ugly item such as the cigarette butts, into wonderful, meaningful photographs.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Alchemy

> A form of chemistry and speculative philosophy practised in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and concerned principally with discovering methods for transmuting baser metals into gold and with finding a universal solvent and an elixir of life.

> Any magical power of process of transmuting a common substance, usually of transmuting a common substance, usually of little value, into a substance of great value.