12.20.2016

body of evidence by karin sanborn



Last Friday evening I had the pleasure of seeing a new group show in Boston that goes by the title APATHIEMy post this month focuses on Jennifer Murphy's installation work here. She is both an exhibitor and champion behind the project.

Some art sticks like glue once met, or maybe, could it just be new air, floating around something significant that was allowed through an open door?  Peripheral to the entrance I encountered what feels like a complex breeze. I hear its whispering notes, a contemporary Song of Hiawatha. Murphy weaves threads from a void into matter. Like an apparition, there are pieces left to witness, but not an entire form.

This beauty realized is a drink from the melancholy wine of remembrance. The artist's own hair adorns the main gauzy element and the walls of this tomb. Intimate feminine objects are frayed like the threads barely holding things together, yet they carry no stain of life force. These materials speak directly to me and to my own relationship to animal bones and hide. This kind of practice suggests an archaeology in the spirit of Love After Death.

Many days later, this encounter still sits beside me, accompanying, materializing in those empty spaces of ether that circulate around singular experiences: the morning cup of tea being drunk, a piece of toast masticated. Murphy's visual poetry hovers, follows, and sits like a spectre. I am not alone. My friend, the sound of silence sits with me, dulling the incessant din outside with its open maw. It commands my attention and I readily give it.

The show's title suggests lack of interest and emotion. The work presented is a stark contradiction to that concept when placed alongside the evidence presented. The construction of Apathie's disinterested, honest skeleton-dancing together with a spirit of loss and reverence in the highest order-is what Feminism is all about... if you ask me. Tell it like it is, tell us how you feel. Bravo.





12.06.2016

Unpredictable Fun by Andrea Zimon

My adventures in clay continue. Ceramic glazing is new to me and hence unpredictable and fun.

Usually.

Unless I am chiseling something from a kiln shelf then glaze on a doughnut has more appeal.



Clay work 'Sky'. The colors were a happy accident as I did not know what would happen. Weak technique requires my gluing the ear back on but I am happy with it.  The piece itself is the result of two pinch pots, two miniature pinch pots for the ears, and carving out the rest. 



Clay work, 'Machine Coil 1'.  Machine coil is produced by a very large extruder - think spaghetti maker.  I am happy with the shape even though it is simple but I would like to learn how to better control the glaze. I definitely painted outside the lines!


 When my second machine coil piece was brought to me and I thought it so bad that I flinched because it was so ugly compared to the intended vision of blue, green, and dark red composition that I had in my head.

  In our class, we all want our work to survive the kiln which can be a crap shoot. This piece was a bucket dipped as opposed to hand painted. I thought I mixed the paint well. I thought I dipped the piece well. I guess I was too enthusiastic with the dipping. My instructor made it look so easy. 

After inspecting it with a sigh, I then set to chiseling it off the shelf. The piece suffered a little. The shelf suffered a lot. As a result, I have a date with the grinder to remove the sharp points of the bottom of the piece.  



Despite uneven glazing, air bubbles, and bare spots, there are interesting parts in the mixing of the blue and green glazes. Even the yellow I thought was going to be red works. I have a lot to learn but you don't learn until you take the first step. 



My wrapped slab creation of weirdness which needs to dry and then be fired.  Lace gives it texture.


My canopic jar of Duametef. An assignment I dreaded but actually resulted pretty well.  I have fired the base successfully and crossing my fingers for the head's firing. I reinforced the ears this time which should prevent breakage.  It is supposed to be a jackal but it looks like a greyhound. 


I continue to love clay and determined to master glazing. 
Although the term 'master' might be loosely defined.