Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Old Man's, Dying Craft. Image 1.

This is first of four image.

Lovers Knot/Rope Mats
http://www.fomil.com/html/f0300frm.htm

An Old Man's, Dying Craft represents a craft called "Sail-making". My father is a sail- maker. Over the years his creativity and work has inspired me as an artist . At the age of 12 is when he first sailed on a ship and started learning the craft, as a sail-maker. Sails were made by hand and knots were an enjoyment and a much needed tool required when working on a ship.


Now at the age of 72 his passion for ropes has only grown and developed into an art form, the passion that inspires him now inspires me to think out side of the square.


Now my children and there children are enjoying the once called craft or trade as we call it today as another media for art.


I have placed the rope object into foliage, each image of the rope work is slowly being consume by the foliage, the rope work represent the old man's craft and the foliage consuming the rope work represents the trade being for gotten, therefore slowly dying.

Old Man's Dying, Craft. Image 2


Old Man's, Dying Craft. Image 3

Old Man's, Dying Craft. Image 4.


Natasha Kempers-Cullen

http://images.google.com.au/imgres?imgurl=http://www.natashakempers-cullen.com/leap.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.natashakempers-cullen.com/&h=563&w=400&sz=108&hl=en&start=1&um=1&tbnid=vn9fHrpAKf9x3M:&tbnh=133&tbnw=94&prev=/images%3Fq%3D%2Bsite:www.natashakempers-cullen.com%2Bcullen%2Bartist%26svnum%3D10%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den
COLOR JAZZ2003nine panels;
each 23" width, 58" height
NOT FOR SALEcotton, tulle, metallic confetti, metallic, variegated rayon, and quilting threads, hand painted fabrics with fiber reactive dyes and textile paints, woven collage construction, machine stitching, machine quiltingCOLOR JAZZ developed out of a need I had to explore color relationships once again, this time in vivid hues. I also wanted to work in a large format with the technique of weaving strips of my hand painted fabrics to create panels. I had recently completed a commission employing the weaving technique on very small panels and I always find it challenging and exciting to change scales of work. This is a very large piece, measuring close to five feet tall and eighteen feet across! Once again, this work developed as a component system: nine smaller panels to be hung together to create the sense of one large piece. There is one panel for each color: red, yellow, blue, purple, green, orange, black, white, and brown. Within each of the panels, I inserted one piece of each of all the other colors into the woven structure. This makes all the panels interact with each other in a very lively and playful and colorful manner. ItÕs like jazz! And, like jazz, these panels can be arranged and rearranged in any combination or sequence! ThatÕs the fun of it.As with much of my work, I hope the viewer will be treated to two different experiences as he/she sees the work from afar and subsequently from up close. From a distance, one will see nine single color panels. The closer one gets to the work, the more details of line, pattern, varying colors, and movement become apparent, and the viewer will see that the painted panels are not just made up of solid colors, but are created with many variations of any color and even with blips and strips of contrasting colors here and there. My love of grid systems is very much in evidence here: the woven structure is a grid of sorts, then the tulle fabric overlaid on the weaving is another grid, and finally all of the machine stitching is another grid. Layers and layers!EXHIBITIONS2003-04 20/20 ENVISION, Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, Maine20/20 ENVISION, University of New England Gallery, Portland, Maine



Natasha at work in her studio.

Statement of PurposeMy work is part of a continual process of discovery. Working with fabric to create my work seems to be so natural to me: I don't even question it. It is an extension of my being and the education I received from the women in my family. Having developed a collage construction process, I can focus now more deeply on the concepts, the beliefs, the images, the interplay of shapes that energize the work.There are three themes that interact and appear in most of my work: a reverence for nature, positive human spirit, and the concept of house and home (the house or shrine shape that occurs in most of my work) as safety and love and strength.

BiographyI have been devoting my time to creating art quilts and mixed media environments since 1987, after sixteen years as an art teacher in the public schools. My work has appeared in many juried exhibitions, including Quilted Constructions: the Spirit of Design (at the American Folk Art Museum, New York City), Quilt National and Visions (Quilt San Diego). I have also shown works in a number of invitational exhibitions throughout the nation and overseas, including the Full Deck Art Quilts project and Women of Taste: Artists and Chefs Collaborative. My commissioned work includes both private and public projects, notably several One Percent for Art commissions in Maine. I continue to teach, mostly at quilt conferences and at art schools including Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, Deer Isle, Maine and Arrowmont School of Arts and Craft, Gatlinburg, Tennessee.A number of my works have received awards and various pieces have been published in books and magazines. One of my pieces is in the permanent collection of the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and another is in the collection of the Museum of Arts and Design, New York City. I don't think I shall ever retire!

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Bread that resemble body parts are put at the storage room in Ratchaburi province, 100 km (62 miles) west of Bangkok, September 4, 2005. [Reuters]

Along with edible human heads crafted from dough, chocolate, raisins and cashews, Kittiwat makes human arms, feet, and chicken and pig parts. He uses anatomy books and his vivid memories of visiting a forensics museum to create the human parts.
He now is receiving regular orders from the curious and from pranksters who want to surprise their friends or colleagues, but that's a minor sideline.
By the end of the year, Kittiwat's confectionary slaughterhouse will go on display at Bangkok's Silpakorn University. It's his final dissertation, and he hopes it will secure him a master of arts degree.
"When people see the bread, they don't want to eat it. But when they taste it, it's just normal bread," he said. "The lesson is 'don't judge just by outer appearances.'"

Thai artist bakes edible body parts

POTHARAM, Thailand - Inside a dark room, realistic-looking "human body parts" are stacked on shelves and hanging on meat hooks. The place looks like a mortuary or the lair of a serial killer, but in fact, it's a bakery. What appears to be putrefying body parts are the bread sculptures of 28-year-old art student Kittiwat Unarrom.
A bakery worker, Kittiwat Unarrom, 28, sculptures bread that resemble body parts in Ratchaburi province, 100 km (62 miles) west of Bangkok, September 4, 2005. [Reuters]"Of course, people were shocked and thought that I was mad when they saw the works. But once they knew the idea behind it, they understood and became interested in the work itself, instead of thinking that I am crazy," said the fine arts masters degree student.
He hopes his realistic artwork will make people ponder whether they are consuming food, or food is consuming them.
"Everyone's life is rushed nowadays, even when it comes to eating," he said. "When we eat, we don't think about our health or safety, we only think of our taste buds."
As an undergraduate art student, Kittiwat started painting portraits. He then moved to mixed media and finally dough — a natural medium for him since his family runs a bakery.

Kittiwat Unarom, 28, a Thai art student, sits behind his works "human being parts" made of bread at his studio in Potharam district of Ratchaburi prov