General
Color notes: chicago in black+white
Heavy, wet snow outlining every black branch is about as close as we get to hoarfrost in Chicago. There's no sparkle, no glitter, no blue sky background but there is an awesome amount of rhythm and repetition. There's also a visual reversal if you focus on the white snow line, the branch becomes the drop shadow.
merry merry
Color notes: Fall purple and orange
Yellow berries | take 2
Color notes: Yellow berries
I've been running past this tree forever but just noticed how at a certain point coming toward this tree when it is leafless in late fall the tiny yellow berries suddenly pop into focus and the whole tree is outlined in tiny circles of yellow.
And now that I write this I realize that I need to go back and try to capture that 'zoom in' with my camera. I'm guessing it's too subtle to get but off I go to see.
Studio experiment: Connect 2.0
I'm not sure what I'll end up calling this series. For now, I see it as the next iteration in the Connect series. Connect 2.1 is inspired by a recent ride on the El to re-live the experience of seeing Chicago via El as when we first moved here in the mid-1990s. I think part of my interest in creating a moment of surprise and discovery comes from learning to see Chicago from the El. The windows of the El frame fleeting glimpses of other lives and spaces and lines. My drawing practice is generally inspired by forms and lines found in nature. Curves and foliage and growth potential are in evidence. But a new set of lines is emerging. These feel like urban forms with motion and direction and angular geometry that I associate with the built environment at various scales, possibly as seen through a window.
Growing up on a farm in Alberta with a full shop and many little drawers filled with washers and bolts and nuts and other fascinating metal objects is clearly another formative experience. I finally found my opportunity to use these gorgeous oversized washers, sourced from the many little drawers at Ace Hardware.
More pieces in the works.
Views from the El
I learned to see Chicago from the El. As I journeyed from my home in Rogers Park to work at Weiss Memorial Hospital, the windows of the El framed my transitory view of the city. Glimpses of back-porch gardens, ornate details in terra cotta, and elaborate chalk drawings interrupted the visual monotony of brick, concrete, and wood. It is these moments of surprise and discovery that animate my art. The conceptual underpinning of my work lies with my ideas about attention, identity, and place—ideas that first emerged during my decade-long career in health care. My compositions contrast luminous glass with matte settings, directing the viewer’s focus through line and form. The materials I use are as durable as they are beautiful. Glass comes to life by motion and interplay with light. Viewers passing by glass mosaics become participants in interaction with a series of moments that illuminate a shared space.
Color notes: Fall leaves
New work at Water Street Gallery
Loved to see how gallerists Maryjo and Anne paired wall art with art objects to create an interesting mix of art. Enjoyed meeting Water Street Gallery regulars as well as meeting some Michigan area Facebook contacts.
Take a gallery stroll at the Water Street Gallery website.
An information-scape at coLab Evanston
Amanda Bryant of HangItUp Chicago has invited me to hang work at coLab in Evanston. Amanda is bringing high quality original fine art into homes and offices using a rental model. She partners exclusively with Chicago area artists to connect with local clients, another angle on staying local. I met Amanda at Gallery, Now! and am delighted that she thought of my work for this light-filled, ideas-intensive workspace. coLab is a coworking and collaboration space for independent professionals and digital entrepreneurs. Working with coLab cofounder Miguel Wong has been fascinating. He has a clear vision of how art+aesthetics contribute to creating an inviting, energetic workspace. From programmers fixated on laptops to informal chats over coffee to afterhours events and meet-ups it's clear that Miguel and his partner Eric Harper are building the vibrant business community they envisioned for coLab.
Pieces from the GLYPH and Scan series form an interesting conceptual connection with coLab where it's all about about information filtering, decoding and encoding. GLYPH's abstracted letter forms point to the creative potential of language. Scan considers our inherent interest in letter forms, offering abstracted text for our pattern-detecting, information-decoding minds. And they look pretty awesome lit up in the front windows at night.
More on coLab here: coLab 900 Chicago Ave | Suite 104 | Evanston, IL | 847.440.4880
About Scan
I have been developing prototypes in a new series Scan over the past couple months. I first started work on Scan in 2009. I had recently transitioned to using sheet glass and could envision a series of scrolling abstracted letter forms. As a speech language pathologist, I have a longstanding interest in language and cognition. Letter forms are inherently engaging to our pattern-detecting, information-decoding minds. With Scan, the viewer is enticed to decipher the abstracted letter forms. Using unfamiliar product names from construction materials reduces the contextual linguistic information to the point where decoding is impossible. Selective attention is activated to find pattern in the randomness. A seemingly simple act of reading is transformed into a cognitively demanding visual puzzle. In this way, the viewing experience points to that of the many people I encountered in clinical practice.
The first prototype of Scan was ungrouted glass on a painted background. The cutting was completely unfamiliar with radically new forms and shapes. I struggled to find a rhythm and ended up setting the piece aside, unfinished, and moving on to other projects.
Two things happened to bring me back to Scan this year. First, I started photographing labels from construction materials found around the studio and in my Home Depot wanderings. As I explored these images, I realized that the graphic retro fonts were perfect for Scan. The forms are solid, like building blocks and cropping these letters created lovely rounded, almost organic shapes.
Second. I read James Gleick's The Information. I am fascinated by effective information exchange between speaker and listener; that is, of the highly contextualized and personally relevant message. Gleick explores the history of information, information as message (the calculable point between randomness and pattern) and information systems and control. The centrality of information to technology and human life itself, shaping our daily lives and conscious moments renewed my interest in Scan as a visual exploration of information filtering and decoding.
Twist 1.0
A new series is taking shape in the studio. Having grown up on a grain farm in northern Alberta, seasons and planting cycles are deeply engrained. I notice plants. I notice stems and leaves as much as blooms and fruit. I like watching color and form change across the growing season. I find deadheads just as interesting as full season blooms. Climbers and vines are particularly captivating: stunning lines are formed by incessant movement and twisting toward the light. I have been drawing Twist over this summer, using images of foliage and seaweed and vines as inspiration. I am equally interested in the luminous glass and the negative space of the matte grout.
Twist celebrates life and growth and vitality. It features spring and apple greens and new colors in my glass palette, pinks and corals. I have been searching for these colors since last fall. These tints from Bullseye require kiln firing to bring out their rich color. Many thanks to my good friend Paul Messink of Turtle Bay Glass for firing this glass.
The first piece is 10"x10". So many directions to explore with this new work.
Color notes: Fall purples
Color notes: Fall greens
coming up in CS Interiors | Fall edition
Studio Experiment: Connect 1.0
One of things that I have realized is that I'm essentially doing R&D: developing hypotheses, setting up experiments, executing, learning from the outcomes, revising my hypotheses and setting up the next experiment. Research has addressed concepts ranging from memory, the narrative self, the conscious moment through to identity and place, information processing and the evolving social landscape. Line, form, color, glass, adhesives, grouts are all variables in the research process. Every series is developed and iterated based on the outcomes of each experiment. I'm sure this model is a result of my science background and years of clinical practice in the data-driven healthcare industry. And I like it. I have always been compelled to understand why I'm doing what I'm doing. Same holds in my art studio/lab.
Within this R&D mindset, I want to do more small experiments this year. Take some outlier ideas in my drawing portfolio to develop and realize in glass. I always learn unexpected things in the translation from line to surface.
Connect 1.0 is an experiment with glass stringer. Stringer is tiny (2mm) and I am captivated by these precision lines, reduced even further by grout. I usually work with curving lines but I have had a circuit board sitting on my desk for months. I love the straight inter-connected lines and circles. I am fascinated by this maze as the basis of information flow and organization.
New Press Post: CS Interiors Feature
Hunding, Rhys. "Masterpiece Theater." CS Interiors. Summer 2012. Masterpiece Theater | CS Interiors Summer 2012 Heather...
New Mosaic Art: Scan 2
18" x 24" glass, gold, grout Letter forms are inherently engaging to our pattern-detecting, information-decoding minds....