Showing posts with label materials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label materials. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Exhibition: WILD & STILL - expressions of the landscape by Janet Botes






Of bird and beast
Janet Botes
Bone, wood, paint, wire and tequila bottle tops
37 x 15 x 16 cm
2014

 

Gogga II (left)
Janet Botes
Photo-transfer, paint, ink, rock and wood on wooden block
31.5 x 11 x 3.5 cm
2014

Elephant Beetle (Megasoma elephas) are part of the Scarabaeidae family and the subfamily Dynastinae. They are classified with the Neotropical rhinoceros beetles.

Tread softly, 
walk carefully
for there are life
all around us

Tread softly
consciously
there are creatures
here among us


Timber (right)
Janet Botes
Wood, rusted nails, paint, filler, varnish
39 x 17.5 x 15.5 cm
2014



Memoirs
Janet Botes
natural materials and collage on paper
20.5 x 14.5 cm
2014

These small collections from the landscape and remnants of human-made items capture moments or memories from being outside - whether walking in the street or walking in the mountain.


Primal sense
Janet Botes
Found bone, carved wood, and mixed media on wood
21 x 18 x 6 cm
2014

The natural softness or brittleness, but also hardness and resilience of bone and wood are accentuated, specifically with the textured background and the simplicity of this piece. On another level, however, the three carved twigs represent the three wise men or astrologers and the jaw bone to the work of medicine men or shamans - alluding to the sacred and primal quality of nature and our place within it.

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The sculptures (Of Bird and Beast and Timber) aim to capture a juxtaposition of the human need to make things lasting, permanent and unchanging, in contrast or opposition to the flux and transience in nature where the rhythms, seasons and cycles of growth and decay seem fleeting, even though it is as timeless as the mountains. It does this through the use of organic as well as inorganic materials - natural vs. synthetic, man-made. It symbolises the relationship between humans and animals, as well as humans and the landscape. 

Process Photos

as part of the preparation for the exhibition, showing material use:











Friday, May 2, 2014

The Windpump that Teaches Us Innovation


Today was one of those days where innovation, creativeness and uniqueness were everywhere to be found, even in the living room. When looking around us, we can often find artwork everywhere. Nature is in itself an artwork, but there are also the manmade artworks. Some of these manmade artworks have a way to surprise people with how simple the idea is, how little things it takes to make and how impressive the outcome is.

Many people are creative, but many people just keep it to their own websites or homes. Yet there are those who take their talent to the streets. When driving around Johannesburg, we often find highly talented dancers, mime artists and others with rather unique talents. Innovative art can also be found in Hartebeespoort Dam, on the way there and within it at the well-visited Chameleon Village. And then.... there are those artists who dwell in the 'other' nearby towns - Parys, Sasolburg, Vaalpark and Vanderbijlpark. These towns hold unique places, events and artwork. It was in Vanderbijlpark that I found a specific little gem of inspiring innovation.

A particular man was selling a 'windpomp'; an object of admiration for several people who were taking it apart to see how he managed to create it. The main parts of the pump were simply crafted from a tin. The rest was skilfully done with strong, thick wire. The bird that is so happily sitting in front of the tap, waiting for its water, was craftily made from a fallen conifer cone (better known as a pine cone). This is an artwork that took a lot of skill and time, but little resources.


There are plenty of tins lying around and many of nature’s own little pieces, which make this a financially practical and environmentally friendly artwork. It's impossible not to have respect for the way struggling or less fortunate people can often come up with the most innovative and unique ideas. We can all learn from their resourcefulness and about how not to waste, rather using and re-using what is available to us at the time. They don’t run to the shops the moment they don’t have canvas, they create their own canvas with what they see around them.

Look for your next artwork around your house, around your street and in your dustbin. You might find your light-bulb moment in something as simple as a dirty tin and some wire. This can be considered as proof that you can never say you’re too poor to make art. Art is inventing, art is seeing potential even in unlikely places.



Further browsing - some more links for Art from Waste:



Saturday, April 12, 2014

Cleaning in your studio



Changing the way you make your art - whether for your own health or to lessen your impact on the environment - does not only apply to the way you make your artworks. You could be painting with natural homemade paints, work with plant dyes or even work with bits of waste that you collect from sidewalks, but still have an incredibly detrimental impact on your own health and the health of our environment due to the chemicals you use to clean your studio.

If you're wondering what I mean, go and read this information (click here) on the Spotless Living website. Also read 'Does it Matter'. Spotless Living has been an incredible tool in my own life, giving useful guidelines and alternatives for personal care and household cleaning. Here's some of those guidelines that applies to your work and cleaning in the studio.

To clean paintbrushes

  • Soften paintbrush bristles by soaking in a cup of hot vinegar for about 30 minutes.
  • Then sprinkle on a little bicarb and stir around.
  • You can also use soap and water to wash them and get all the paint out.
  • Rinse with warm water.

To clean hard dry paintbrushes that you forgot to clean

  • Soak the brush in vinegar for an hour or so until you can bend the bristles.
  • Fill a saucepan with vinegar until the brush bristles are covered.
  • Bring the vinegar to a boil and let it simmer for a couple of minutes.
  • Remove the pan from the heat and let it cool for a minute before removing the brush.
  • Gently comb the brush with your fingers. The paint will still be attached but will fall away as you comb it.
  • Rinse the brush under running water to release the loose paint.
  • Depending on how much paint there was you may need to repeat steps 5 and 6 a couple of times, but before you know it your paint brush will be ready for another round!
Also read William Burgoil's method to clean his oil paint brushes.

General tips

  • With some of your cleaning you could just use water. Try cleaning with water first, before reaching for a bottle of cleaning liquid. 
  • When using non-chemical, natural cleaning materials you can empty your bucket into the garden. 
  • Use old rags or microfibre cloths for most cleaning jobs. Soft cloths are best for wood and metal surfaces.
  • An old toothbrush is great to clean some of your artmaking tools

Using glass as mixing palette, monoprints or other printmaking?

Window and glass cleaner

  • Mix equal parts of water and vinegar (or lemon juice) in a spray bottle.
  • Alternatively use vinegar infused with lemon or other citrus fruit peels. Simply add some peels to a bottle of vinegar and allow them to soak for a few days before using. The more peels and the longer you let them soak the more powerful and fragrant the infusion will become.
  • Spray onto windows or any glass surface and wipe clean with a rag, or buff to a shine with crumpled newspaper.
  • Or, spray glass with 3% (10 volume) hydrogen peroxide and wipe with a clean rag

Messed on the walls while being wildly creative?

Wall wash

  • To clean painted walls or painted woodwork, mix one cup of vinegar, one cup of bicarb and three cups of warm water.
  • Wipe dirt from the surfaces with a soft cloth dipped in the mixture, and rinse with clean water.
  • Use this same mixture to prepare walls or surfaces for painting.

Try these in your studio and let us know whether it works for you. Also share any other cleaning solutions that you have found effective and eco-friendly.

Sources:

Friday, March 7, 2014

Natural Building courses in 2014

Do you do a lot of sculptural work, installations, land art or outdoor work? Ever thought of using natural building techniques as part of your creative work? Well, if you're interested, here is your chance to learn some of the techniques you can use!

Natural Building Collective
Peter McIntosh will be hosting a series of courses at Magic Mountains, near Barrydale. These will include:

21 – 23 March: Compost toilet workshop
10 – 18 May: Natural building course: materials and techniques
9 – 11 August: Pizza oven workshop
18 – 25 October: Natural building course: materials and techniques

For more information email naturalbuildingcollective@gmail.com


Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Too busy trying to be an artist, to be green too?

Have you been painting, drawing or photographing this month? Have you been creating land art? Have you been living a creative life? Or have you been wrapped up and distracted by life's little dramas?

As artists we don't necessarily get encouraged or motivated to do art by looming deadlines and bosses tracking our productivity, unless you work at a company, or do a lot of client-driven work - in which case, I'm not really talking to you at the moment. I'm talking to the full time artists, the starving artists, the supposedly self-sustaining artists. The artists who need to motivate themselves to do the work they need to, in order to further their careers, or put food on the table. I'm talking to an enormous amount of artists, who might really like to do more natural or environmentally conscious work, but they cope with the stresses and challenges of:

  • managing their own self-criticism or inner critic enough so that they could push through the resistance and fear of failure far enough to actually produce an artwork. 
  • finding inspiration, art materials and the energy to work hard, while being worried about their bank balance, the rent needing to be paid in 3 days, or even overcoming the emotional turmoil from the latest gallery owner rejection. 
  • finding a place to sell or show their work - too often with a lack of knowing where to go, how to approach a gallery, shop owner or agent.
  • coping with clients for commissions who do not value our creative work in the same way that they value the work of a doctor, lawyer or financial manager - undercutting our prices, resulting that we make very little money when considering the cost of our materials and the amount of time it may take to create the commissioned work

I could go on and grow the list further, but the point I'm trying to make is that I understand that there are many challenges that artists face daily. So expecting artists to change the way they create art in order for it to be safer and more respecting towards our environment is a bit much to ask, right? Wrong! I believe that we can overcome many of these challenges by changing the way we make art. 



"Ungrown Branches" by Kai Lossgott


Before I talk about these benefits, let me clarify what changes I am referring to:
  • instead of buying commercial acrylics and oil paints, you mix your own paints - buying and collecting pigments and binders. Yes, you'll need to research and experiment, using tested recipes and even finding your own, but this is all part of the process, which adds to the story behind your work.
Danelle Malan from Cotton Star, painting with ProNature Paints as part of Claire Homewood's Collage Mural Project

  • If you're a sculptor, you will experiment with different materials and methods that don't create hazardous waste or toxic fumes.

Sculptural work in wood, by Loni Dräger

  • If you create prints, you could try to find new substrates to print on - organic cotton, hemp, papyrus, handmade recycled paper, dried leaves stitched together, bamboo sheets, wood... use your creativity!
  • Try use things you would normally throw away - keeping them away from the landfill or the ocean. You'll save money by using an empty yoghurt container to wash your paintbrushes instead of buying a container. You'll save even more money by using 'trash' as materials, creating interesting sculptures, installation art, or mixed media works. The sky is the limit, we have so much free materials to our disposal (no pun intended)!

"Power", found Plastic and Electrical Cables, Simon Max Bannister 2012

  • Also think about ways that your art can contribute to your community - doing murals, mosaics with waste materials, or giving art classes to kids. Your art will expand much more than you realize when you start exploring and being open to new opportunities and ways of doing things.

Land Art in the Tankwa Karoo by Strijdom van der Merwe


In short, I'm asking you as an artist to explore, to find new ways, to create something unique. Not really much to ask for, if you consider that this exploration and learning is PART of your job as an artist!

Because you'd be doing things differently to other artists, some people may struggle to understand your art at first, but it definitely sets you apart from your competition. Tell people about the process, how much you're learning about art through your new focus or approach. They will be interested, many will love it, and many people will be inspired to make changes in the way they do things within their work or life too. And you do want your art to inspire others, or make them think differently, correct?

Installation view of "Cree Prophesy" by Stefanie Schoeman

As mentioned, you could be saving money by working more naturally - avoiding chemically laden products and materials. Some 'pure' materials are more expensive than their commercial, mass-produced counterparts, for sure. But the cost to your health and wellbeing cannot be measured. Using a citrus cleaner for your oilpaints instead of turpentine is a great way to make a small improvement in your art practice. The citrus cleaner is more expensive, but without even being conscious of it, you'll be saving on medical costs in the future. Here's an extract about long-term exposure to turpentine:
When inhaled, turpentine can irritate the eyes, nose, throat and lungs, and cause coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath and a sore throat. The vapors may also affect the brain or nervous system, and trigger headache, dizziness, confusion and nausea. Beyond inhalation, if turpentine is ingested or absorbed through the skin, it can cause gastrointestinal burning and pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Repeated or long-term exposure may damage the kidneys, bladder and nervous system as well as trigger dermatitis and eczema. (Source)
If you feel that changing your materials and techniques in your art is too much of a challenge, there is another way that you can effect positive change or support our planet. By focusing, even if only for one series of work, or in some of your artworks, on environmental issues, conservation or a related topic. As artists we have a responsibility to make society more aware, more clued up about what is really happening in our world. If you are one of the artists who answers this call of duty, then environmental degradation and sustainable development gives you a lifetime of conceptual material to work from. 


One in a series of photographs by Dillon Marsh, documenting the sociable weavers nests in the Kalahari 

Further reading - check out:

Eco Friendly Art Brands and Materials on Fine Arts with Lori McNee


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Stone Paper - is the writing on the wall?

ZHANG JIANJUN

Existence Series, 1989

Acrylic, Chinese ink, Xuan paper, wood, stone, paper mache on canvas 
84 × 75 × 8 cm


stone papers” contain 80% Calcium Carbonate (basically pulverized marble or limestone) and 20% High Density Polyethylene (HDPE—the same plastic that’s used in milk jugs and plastic bags).


Source: Tumblr

While there's not yet a lot of reviews about the paper, and whether it's really as environmentally friendly as it claims to be, it seems to be a good option when you look at the water consumption and energy savings in its production. They are said to use no water, no toxic chemical bleaches and use far less energy.  They are recyclable as well. (Read more)


From the Sketchy Musings Blog


I have also read that the paper is made from the waste product in quarries from the building and construction industry. If this is the case, and if the sludge from mining dumps could also be used, then this paper has my vote.

Read up, find out and speak up! What do you think - is this tree free paper a wonderful new innovation or just another gimmick tapping into a green consumerism market? Leave a comment, or email your thoughts to artlovenature@gmail.com


Source