Saturday, September 22, 2012
Friday, September 21, 2012
WCA of GA "The Ragdoll Project"
The Woman's Caucus for Art of Georgia is taking on a project to protest the human trafficking and child sex slave business. I have been asked to participate. I spoke to the woman who is spearheading this project and was told we will be making rag dolls without faces to represent the children.
The project is a offspring of what Philadelphia did last year
http://phila-wca.blogspot.com/2011/08/call-for-art-rag-dolls.html
It will be held here at the 2 Rules Fine Art Gallery located at Marietta Square in Marietta Georgia.
http://www.2rulesfineart.com/
The project is a offspring of what Philadelphia did last year
http://phila-wca.blogspot.com/2011/08/call-for-art-rag-dolls.html
It will be held here at the 2 Rules Fine Art Gallery located at Marietta Square in Marietta Georgia.
http://www.2rulesfineart.com/
Friday, September 7, 2012
Native American Earthenware 1200-1400
Measures
8 1/2" L x 42" circumference
Early
Caddoan decoration on a prehistoric Southeastern pottery of the Crocket
Curviliear design. Red pigment
(hematite) was rubbed into the etchings.
The Caddo
Nation is a confederacy of several Southeastern Native American tribes, who
traditionally inhabited much of what is now East Texas, Northern Louisiana and
portions of Southern Arkansas and Oklahoma.
I tried
to depict the piece of ancient pottery with white thread stitching on black
felt, the thread being the etchings that would be done on the clay.
This piece in the Fiber Art Fusion show
Uguisu
Measures 25
1/2" L x 17" W
This
wallhanging was inspired from my deck of Korean playing cards they measure 2 1/8"
x 1 3/8", I fondly remember playing this with my mother as a young adult. In Korea the flower card game is called "Hwatu"
( 화투 ) which translates as "battle of flowers"
another name for the game is "Go Stop".
The bird
depicted in this wall hanging is a Japanese Bush warbler (Uguisu) English name
Japanese Nightingale, which sits on the branch of a plum tree amongst the
beautiful blossoms (Prunus mume), commonly known as ume or Japanese apricot. The
tree originated in China and later was brought to Korea, Vietnam and Japan. The
blooms have colouring ranging from white to rose to deep red.
The
Nightingale is famous for it's beautiful song and is much depicted in Japanese
poetry.
The plum
blossom, which is known as the meihua (梅花), is one of
the most beloved flowers in China and has been much used in Chinese art and
poetry for centuries. The plum blossom is a symbol of winter and a harbinger of
spring. The blossoms are so beloved because they are viewed as blooming most
vibrantly admist the winter snow, exuding an ethereal elegance,while their
fragrance perfumes the air at even the coldest times of the year. The plum
blossom came to symbolize perseverance and hope,also beauty, purity, and the
transistoriness of life. In Confucianism, the plum blossom stands for the
principles and values of virtue.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
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