Using Japanese washi paper – much of it printed with the artist’s copperplate etchings – Young sculpts snippets of domestic life. She is captivated by the fleeting moments of the every day, and manages to bring a childlike whimsy into a body of work that is adult and highly skilled.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8pYGAYq_8vE
source: http://www.dailyartmuse.com/2010/07/05/cybele-youngs-miniature-paper-sculptures/
Tuesday, 6 August 2013
Noriko Ambe
source: http://dailyartmuse.com/page/12/?s=white
A Piece of Flat Globe Vol.9, Yupo, acrylic medium 6 11/16″ x 8″ x 3 9/16″ - |
Drawing with an Exacto knife, Japan’s Noriko Ambe laboriously alters thick stacks of Yupo, a white paper made in Japan. The resulting sculptures, rife with snaking curves and rippling lines, are meant to evoke not only the peaks and valleys of the earth’s landscape, but also the wrinkles and folds of the human landscape. - See more at: http://dailyartmuse.com/page/12/?s=white#sthash.1biqeaQb.dpuf
John Singer Sargent
The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit by John Singer Sargent, Oil on canvas 1882, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
The painting depicts four young girls in the family's Paris apartment. The painting is now prominently displayed in the Boston museum in-between the two tall blue-and-white Japanese vases depicted in the work. The vases, as well as the painting itself, were donated by the Boit family.
The painting's unusual composition was noted at its earliest viewings, but the subject was taken simply as that of girls at play. Henry James, who should have known better, described the painting as representing a "happy play-world....of charming children." Only much later did viewers began to recognize the psychologically unnerving nature of the painting.
The girls (Florence, Jane, Mary Louisa and Julia) appear to be at successive phases of childhood, retreating as they grow older into alienation and loss of innocence. Notice the placement of the two older girls, at the edge of a darkened entryway, perhaps symbolic of maturation into a disturbing isolated future. All of the girls seem uncomfortably stiff and doll like, even the youngest. In retrospect, Sargent was prophetic; none of the girls were to marry, and the two oldest later suffered emotional problems.
Madame X (Madame Pierre Gautreau) by John Singer Sargent,1884 Metropolitan Museum of Art |
source: http://www.penhook.org/JSS.htm
Steven Lee
Jar with Butterflies, 2011 Porcelain, cobalt inlay, decals 14 x 12 x 14 in. Jar with Dragon, 2012 porcelain, cobalt inlay 15" x 15" x 23" Platter 2012 porcelain, cobalt inlay, 18" x 18" x 3" |
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