Fine Art

Nature in City; City in Nature

I am loving a new creative input—and outlet—these days with artist Annie Asebrook. EvanstonMade had an outdoor art initiative during the month of February at the Canal Shores Golf Club. Annie proposed figuring out an installation using only natural materials with one hour installation time.

And so began a new collaboration exploring nature and city. We share an interest in finding new ways to present and highlight the incredible variety and resilience of the natural world thriving around the built world.

psCO13 common reed Annie Asebrook + Heather Hancock 4/21

psCO13 common reed Annie Asebrook + Heather Hancock 4/21

My understanding of our biological attunement to the natural world as both restorative and energizing is rooted in the idea that nature provides the perfect balance of pattern/repetition and information/complexity. City environments are often imbalanced, with an overload of implicit and explicit information alongside extreme repetition or chaotic visual noise. Approaching the natural world as information sets helps me understand why staying connected to the natural world is so important to living well in urban environments.

My eyes have a habit of finding patterns in multitudes. The repeated patterns of nature — found in leaves, pine cones, ferns, burrs — hold my fascination. So do the massive redundancies of modern industrial life, conjuring images of large piles of batteries, or light bulbs, or tires. There’s a strange paradox to these mounds; on the one hand each unit’s individuality is rendered anonymous, and yet, if you look closely enough, one soon realizes that each unit is, however slightly, unique. At the same time, each individual piece does give up its singularity to the collective aesthetic that derives its power from numbers. 
— Annie Asebrook
Hancock:Asebrook CGG submission.005.jpeg
Hancock:Asebrook CGG submission.003.jpeg

We are approaching weekly installations as inductive explorations in re-framing or re-presenting natural elements in public urban spaces. Each installation is a new opportunity to collect and name natural elements, edit segments for arbitrary discontinuity from nature’s continuity, identify possible new contexts and discover compositions in new geometries and interactions.

We make new discoveries with each installation and hope others who encounter the work will also enjoy a moment of surprise and delight, beauty and humor.

 In using natural materials and public spaces, these installations are ephemeral experiences that disappear with natural forces and elements making an entirely sustainable art making system.

New ideas for spring GO series

I’m busy sketching ideas for spring GO series. Given my precision cutting approach to glass, I do refine ideas digitally. This helps translate ideas into material form. Things evolve while I’m cutting from this base composition. This spring is GO time! Heading back outdoors in search of color and signs of life and just maybe some social interaction. The words I’m encoding for this series include go, grow and bloom. And exploring lots of juicy ideas about nature-in-city and city-in-nature.

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REFLECT inspo

And I have thousands of images of built world moments that inspire my REFLECT series. It is our interaction with the line and transitions in the streetscape that creates infinite unique perspectives and rhythms.

Sample inspo | REFLECT series


REFLECT 3.9 edge | 2@48”x30” glass c Heather Hancock 2019

REFLECT 3.9 edge | 2@48”x30” glass c Heather Hancock 2019

ENCODE insp

I’m updating my portfolio for 2021 with new work. As I scroll back through my iPhone pix I can see inspirations for color, composition and texture from visual moments I’ve noticed over the past several months. Here’s a small sampling of the every day moments that inspire my work.

Encode: BLOOM 20”x20” glass + paint c Heather Hancock 2020

Encode: BLOOM 20”x20” glass + paint c Heather Hancock 2020

Encode FOCUS | glass + paint c Heather Hancock 2020

Encode FOCUS | glass + paint c Heather Hancock 2020

Grayscale kind of day

Some days call for gray on gray.

ENCODE: Focus | hand cut glass + paint | 20”x20” c Heather Hancock 2020

ENCODE: Focus | hand cut glass + paint | 20”x20” c Heather Hancock 2020

I regularly cycle between popping saturated color and grayscale. I ended up working in mostly with grays, blacks and whites a few years ago when certain colors of glass were not readily available. I was exploring architectural form+line at the time so grayscale was an easy and logical simplification of my glass palette. I’m ready for color again, and finding my paint palette with ENCODE but I’m also mixing in some grayscale pieces and love how these look.

grayscale | ENCODE + REFLECT c Heather Hancock

grayscale | ENCODE + REFLECT c Heather Hancock

I especially love to see the dialog with the architectural series. I can see that these different approaches to beauty and information in the cityscape are connected. There’s something so clear and crisp…helps me focus.

GIFT GUIDE

Art makes a very special and enduring gift.

top L Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | top R Reflect 2.51 grid (22x22) | bottom R Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | bottom L urban vine (14x14)

top L Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | top R Reflect 2.51 grid (22x22) | bottom R Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | bottom L urban vine (14x14)

There are lots of ways to make choosing a piece for someone else (or yourself) easier. We can jump on a call to talk about your space. I am happy to create visuals of possible hangings in your space to visualize how a piece could work on your wall. I can help you think about lighting for the work—these pieces love love natural light…and light at a 30-45 degree angle makes them sparkle!

If you are shopping for someone else we can make a presentation piece available and then let them make a final selection. Or I can get you a custom gift certificate. We can work together to make sure the art piece is exactly right.

I can also point you to any number of talented artists in my world.

Another idea is to connect you with an art professional from my network. Art consultants and gallerists have a broad understanding of art and what’s available out there (which, let’s be honest, is overwhelming!) and how art can bring a space to life. I probably know an art professional in your area and am happy to connect you.

top L Encode: BUILD (20x20) | top R Lake 1.13 (14x14) | bottom R Reflect 1.54 (24x24) | bottom L Lake 2.4 (22x22)

top L Encode: BUILD (20x20) | top R Lake 1.13 (14x14) | bottom R Reflect 1.54 (24x24) | bottom L Lake 2.4 (22x22)

top L Encode: BLOOM (20x20) | top R EncodeL BUILD (20x20) | bottom R Encode BLOOM (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 1.43 grid (24x24)

top L Encode: BLOOM (20x20) | top R EncodeL BUILD (20x20) | bottom R Encode BLOOM (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 1.43 grid (24x24)

top L Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | top R R2.39 (22x22) | bottom R Encode: THRIVE (20x20) | bottom L urban vine sketch (14x14)

top L Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | top R R2.39 (22x22) | bottom R Encode: THRIVE (20x20) | bottom L urban vine sketch (14x14)

top L Encode: AIM (20x20) | top R City stringer drawing (14x14) | bottom R Encode: BUILD (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 2.44 concrete rhythm (22x22)

top L Encode: AIM (20x20) | top R City stringer drawing (14x14) | bottom R Encode: BUILD (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 2.44 concrete rhythm (22x22)

top L Encode: BUILD (20x20) | top R Reflect 2.39 chevron (22x22) | bottom R Reflect 1.59 truss study (24x24) | bottom L tower stringer drawing (14x14)

top L Encode: BUILD (20x20) | top R Reflect 2.39 chevron (22x22) | bottom R Reflect 1.59 truss study (24x24) | bottom L tower stringer drawing (14x14)

top L Encode: ACT (20x20) | top R urban vine stringer drawing (14x14) | bottom R Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 1.43 grid (24x24)

top L Encode: ACT (20x20) | top R urban vine stringer drawing (14x14) | bottom R Encode: FOCUS (20x20) | bottom L Reflect 1.43 grid (24x24)

I’d love to hear from you! Art makes life better.

REFLECT 3.6 curved grid

Recent piece in my architectural series. This piece is inspired by the curved grid of Chicago’s Lake Point Tower. The starting point for my art practice is how the human mind is engaged by information in the environment. The natural world gives us perfectly complex and comprehensible information which is fundamentally restorative. In the city we sort through layers and fragments of explicit and implicit information. We filter, decipher and decode and are occasionally rewarded with moments of discovery, surprise and beauty.

REFLECT 3.6 curved grid | hand cut glass inlay 48”x30” c Heather Hancock 2020

REFLECT 3.6 curved grid | hand cut glass inlay 48”x30” c Heather Hancock 2020

DETAIL

DETAIL