This entry is dedicated to Rasit Rejwan Tellioglu. He contacted me from Turkey to ask for a little bit more background info on how works from the Tower Series come together. The Tower Series pieces are meant to be slivers of an urban environment. These slivers of familiar scenes are usually peripheral or overlooked. Once highlighted, these scenes can develop into landmarks of personal meaning. The idea of these pieces came to me while i was driving around some unknown streets in Portland Oregon. From certain angles, the street could look like another place I knew (sometimes they would look like sections of places I had once lived). Once my particular view of the place changed the sliver of similarity would disappear. I looked through some old photos and believe that I can detail the process through the creation of the piece called "Destinations of the Day" from the Tower Series that consists of five pieces. See below: Below are some more process shots from various Towers made over the span of the Series. "Destinations of the Day" was the final piece in this series and led me to begin making the Building Block Series. Everyone-I hope you find this interesting.
Rasit- Thank you for your interest. I hope this is the information you wanted. I hope all is well in Turkey, because.... ...in a totally unrelated turn of events, I am departing for Istanbul in five hours! It is crazy how things work sometimes.
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My new show at Beaver Galleries called "Of Import" was just reviewed by Kerry-Anne Cousins of the Canberra Times! This is fantastic news and the review was quite nice as well...
I posted some pictures of my current exhibition on Facebook here. Here is a little video I made of my recent exhibition to show you all of the work installed...
My work is done and it will finally be installed tomorrow at Beaver Galleries for my solo show called "Of Import". I am anxious and nervous for the opening and to finally have this experience happen. There will be new works from the Pallet Series, the Crate Series and a new series called the Shipment Series. Here is a sneak peak of the my work (shot fantastically by Rob Little) that will be in the show...
Yesterday, I officially enrolled into the Australian National University to pursue a PhD in Sculpture (http://www.creativearts.anu.edu.au/). This will be a three year adventure to develop my current focus. I am excited about this opportunity, but also hesitant since it has been several years since I have been to school.
Happy 2011!
I thought that I would freshen the look of the website and try to make it a cleaner presentation. Please let me know what you think and if there is some other content that you would like me to add. I personally am looking forward to this year and am anxious to get things moving forward. I only need to wait for Australia to return from it's holiday break... It has been a hectic month of preparation for my upcoming trip to the States.
At the end of this month I will depart for Portland, Seattle, Chicago, Toledo, Carbondale, and finally St. Louis before returning to the lucky country. I will see friends and family, do some work and eat several tacos. I have also shipped over some work to SOFA Chicago. If you are in the tri-state area, come by and check out the show. Below are a couple shots of some work now in transit to Chicago... I am just wrapping up some new work to send to SOFA Chicago. The work is mainly from the Crate Series and comments on the want of basic needs. I will be going with a new gallery from Canberra Australia called Beaver Galleries. Below are some images of some of the work in progress:
I thought I would detail some of the background story for one of my new series the Crate Series.... Idea: The Crate Series is my first new series since moving to Australia from America. My previous series were primarily focused on exploring the structures and forms found in the everyday surroundings of urban landscapes. By highlighting on these sometimes overlooked places and objects, I was trying to highlight the common elements, struggles and conditions of life experienced by individuals regardless of the exact city in which they were living. Upon moving to Australia, I lost my landscape. I felt that my imagery did not extend it's meaning to my new environment. This has led me to a new chapter and this new series. With the Crate Series I am transitioning my imagery and ideas to span the distance between my old horizons and my new. The Crates are pieces that physically represent the form of a shipping crate and the imagery on the interior depicts an object or idea that would be a need or a want for something that is un-orderable, un-receivable and/or undeliverable. These "crates" are empty and enclosed forms that hold nothing but the depiction of the unobtainable. Construction: To create the works for this Crate Series , I first think of an appropriate piece to construct. See Fig.1a I then draw the image that I would like to illustrate on the interior of the glass form. I do take photos to help my editing of composition and detail, but my sketches are rendered freehand. This allows me to edit the image the way I see them in my head and have the image retain the evidence of being done by my hand. See Fig.1 for a sample of a final sketch. Once I have my drawing, I scan the black and white image into my computer so that I can print it onto transparencies. I then take the transparencies and make sandblast resists that will allow me to blast the line work of the image onto the glass blanks. Each of the six sides of the crates are made from clear pre-fused glass blanks. After fusing, the edges of the blanks are cleaned up to make the edges sharp and clean. Once this is done, I then apply the prepared sand blast resists to the surfaces and blast the line work gently into the glass surfaces. The blasted lines then get a high fired enamel paint wiped into them (similar to a etching plate for printmaking). I then paint and wipe more ink onto the image to give it gray-scale, tone and definition. The paint is then fired onto the surface of the glass in another firing. Once the image is fired onto the glass blanks, I then flip the pieces over and place them back into the kiln with additional cut glass strips on top. These glass strips are then tack fused to the surface of each piece in a third firing. These strips give the blanks the dimensional support slating that mimics that of wood crates. See Fig.2 for a kiln load of pieces prior to this tack fuse and Fig.3 for a detail shot of a single panel that has been tack fused. After this third firing, the pieces are gently sandblasted on their surface. Each piece is then put back in the kiln for a fourth and final firing to gently fire polish the sandblasting to a gentle burnished look. This surface for me gives the final form a more physical appearance and also hazes the image as if it was a memory. The six sides are then glued together into their final form. The sides of the crates are glued with an acrylic set UV glue, and the caps are adhered with a construction grade silicone. These two glues enable the form to more easily adjust to fluctuations in room temperatures and to endure handling. One of the sides also gets a small hole drilled through it to enable the form to "breathe" and handle changes in altitude. The pieces are then signed, photographed and recorded. If you are interested in these works, please contact the Duane Reed Gallery. I have just returned from a mega 40 day trip around the world. Before I left, I was helping Warren Langley install his 25 meter light sculpture "Touching Lightly" on top of the old smokestack of the Canberra Glassworks. I missed the opening and the first lighting, but here are some images of the project: During the trip, I taught two workshops - in Japan and Pittsburgh - and had three group shows - at Morgan, Swanson Reed, and New Glass and Photography - all were successful and great experiences for me. Overall, it was an excellent trip and I was very excited to see all my old friends and make some new ones.
Now that I am back to Australia, it is time to hit the gym, get focused on accomplishing some objectives down here and working on GAS (check out an update here). Here are a handful of images from the trip: |
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