I so enjoyed a virtual studio visit with the KBAA team yesterday. Here are some images of the studio…and commission process notes. hh
sample idea board
sample rendering > final piece
sneak peek. healthcare | graphic lobby 250SF in 14 panels
I so enjoyed a virtual studio visit with the KBAA team yesterday. Here are some images of the studio…and commission process notes. hh
sample idea board
sample rendering > final piece
sneak peek. healthcare | graphic lobby 250SF in 14 panels
Some of my very first art pieces years ago were mountain themed. I grew up experiencing the pure awe of the Canadian Rockies. Their rugged hard edged beauty and monumentality puts everything into perspective: we are tiny specks on this ancient planet.
I did a series of mountainSCAPES a few years ago for a west coast healthcare facility. This graphic approach to mountain and sky created a crisp shimmering view in a patient waiting area.
And now with new ways of approaching texture and color and dimension, I’m excited to circle back and re-visit this imagery.
And, of course, can’t wait to get back to reflections. This time I can see glass and paint combined.
I can also imagine how gorgeous this could be in muted evening shades (grayed mauves and blues).
Next step refining drawings and planning a glass order. Mixing iridized silvers with blacks and whites will get glass working to create dimension and inorganic irregularities.
I recently had a lovely conversation with Catherine Orer for the Artist Entrepreneur podcast.
First, I so appreciate Catherine’s introduction to the episode. She talks about the uniquely challenging times right now and the need to be patient and gentle with ourselves in this moment with so much uncertainty and recovery.
We had a free-ranging chat about how I came to my art practice with glass from healthcare, the creative challenges and advantages of working with glass, and a bit about my experience commissioned work with art consultants.
Check in out…and take a look back through the episodes. Some great resources for small biz/creative entrepreneurs. Don’t miss Episode39 with PandrDesign.
I’m excited to be developing an installation concept to connect with the facility’s surrounding pastoral landscape. I like the idea of a using color to create an abstract landscape and then reward a viewer with additional information and detail as they get closer. It’s a huge piece so it needs to be a graphic, clean lined approach to fit within project budget.
I’ve been creating citySCAPES for a while now. They all started with a goal of creating a ‘city font.’ I wanted to see if I could create a simple vocabulary that read as an abstract city, essentially like a line of text. I have a longstanding obsession with letter forms and have worked with text in many different forms.
This piece in my Proust series (collaboration with Dr. Virginia Barry’s book Scratch and Sniff Proust, the neuroscience of scent) was the original version of a ‘city font.’ Here a tiny French village.
The next commissioned cityscape was for a building lobby in my hometown, Evanston, IL. This piece kept the graphic font-like concept for the city element and added the foliage on top (a reference to both the city’s robust urban forest and the botanical imagery in the architectural details on the facade of the building). A graphic lake concept completed the bottom of the piece for a highly stylized cityscape.
For subsequent commissions clients requested more representational city skylines. San Diego was still an abstracted all white simple forms but now overall forms were informed by an actual skyline.
SF skyline went further with specific SF buildings represented in a graphic style.
And then came the NYC project with an imaginary skyline created based on the upper west side from central park. With much bigger panels, more detail could be included. And, of course, this project has the first reflection in glass (which I must do more of).
Recent proposals have me thinking about cityscapes again. The wheels are turning. I’m envisioning a more abstracted approach again. Love seeing the evolution of ideas with different projects and clients.
It’s hard to explain glass using static images. Hand samples are available for client meetings. Get in touch about your project.
I love when ideas intersect in new ways. My core interest is the aesthetics of information. In current work information-rich nature gets reduced to simple graphic versions, borrowing “built world” lines to convey natural imagery. City environments tend to be either information overwhelm—signage, street markings, infrastructure, material transitions, sanctioned and unsanctioned painting+markings, etc.—or uninteresting repetition, patterned or chaotic. I am interested in the compelling form of diverse kinds of information: textural/tactile, matte vs glossy/reflectance, structural, semantic, spatial, natural.
A recent idea board explores integrating REFLECT/architectural work and SCAN/abstract text forms into a dimensional urban collage. Recent technical discoveries with my ENCODE series free me to explore lovely minimalist compositions.
Love this approach and can’t wait to try something like this.
About a year and a half ago I made hand held samples available for client meetings and it has been a game changer. I always say that glass is “alive.” Holding a sample in hand, a viewer immediately understands how glass flickers and shimmers as it (or the viewer) moves around. Seeing glass in person also helps understand that the work is dimensional, on its way to sculptural. I consistently hear back from art consultant partners that samples make all the difference in conveying the ‘specialness’ of glass to clients, something that is so challenging to capture in static images.
Get in touch if you need samples for client meetings.
Thrilled to see my ENCODE and REFLECT series in dialog. Techniques and approaches I’ve developed with ENCODE are driving new ideas for my REFLECT series.
Leave it to me to make work that is super hard to photograph. I love the subtlety of the ‘embossed’ grout-on-grout elements on the top corner. From a distance it looks like neutral texture. You gotta get close to see the full detail. Lots to explore with this approach.
January has been a month for exploring ideas and testing techniques. I have been thinking about how my two main groups of work, REFLECT and ENCODE, are related. Both series approach city as communication. REFLECT focuses on the vocabulary of architecture and the viewer’s role in perceiving the repetition and rhythms. ENCODE finds beauty in abstracted text forms, fragments of words and ideas, pointing to the ubiquitous signage, markings in the city. I can see these series will begin to interact.
I’m excited to be thinking about my biggest project yet.
I am developing concepts for a reception desk in a hospital. The clients have requested my interpretation of their rolling landscape. I’m enjoying the challenge of using my “precision line” approach for a landscape concept. My goal is to let glass speak for itself within a minimalist composition that offers a moment of beauty and interest in a busy healthcare environment.
I love coming full circle back to healthcare with my artwork. Much of the initial inspiration and impetus for my creative practice comes directly from working in hospitals. Thinking about how profoundly our physical surroundings impact our well-being led to my interest in exploring how art can be a powerful element in creating inviting, interesting spaces.
Made some fun Christmas cards this year. Gotta remember this for next year…and maybe start a bit before Christmas Eve next year!
Every year I love experimenting with a new ornament idea. Over the years there are have been painted mirrors, layered silver paper, and various attempts at folded paper. This year I wanted to do something with my translucent film that would transmit and reflect light. My son Milo has a 3D printer and designed the ornament holders w integrated hangers. Fun.
i often get asked about art influences. The natural world is a constant source of inspiration with constant change and transformation. Another big source of inspiration is the random small moments I find in the city around me. Lines, materials, patterns, transitions that catch my eye. I have made it a habit to ‘notice what I notice’ even if I don’t always understand why. Here are few recent random finds.
These prints pull together so many of my longstanding fascination with finding beauty in the cityscape. Fragments of materials and information, textures and transitions, repetition and predictability intersect with powerful and resilient nature. All is in flux on different time cycles. These little urban portraits capture some of the random and vibrant quality of cities.