Archive for the 'Sculpture' Category



Kinetic Sculptures in Santa Fe

Published on May 24, 2007

This is a clip of some kinetic sculptures that I thought were pretty interesting. They were installed in the court yard of a Catholic Church. The wind was blowing fairly strong, so they really were moving good. The artist is Mark White.


Dale Chihuly at the Bellagio

Published on May 21, 2007

I just got back last night from my trip to Las Vegas, and while the Guggenheim was closed for installation, I was able to check out Dale Chihuly’s glass installation, Fiero del Como, in the lobby skylights of the Bellagio Hotel. It is composed of over 1,000 “flowers,” weighs over 40,000 lbs. and is reputed to have cost around $1 million. A thing of beauty in a city that seemed to be suffering from a lack of it.

Dale Chihuly's Installation at the Las Vegas Bellagio.

Close-up View of the Chihuly Bellagio Skylight Installation

Detail View of the Pieces in the Chihuly Installation at the Bellagio Hotel


Return from the Southwest

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I recently returned from my trip through New Mexico, Arizona and Southern Utah. It was pretty amazing! Beautiful landscapes across vast expanses.

Last Wednesday I went through Santa Fe and saw many interesting galleries. On Canyon Road the are over 200 galleries alone. Here are few pictures of work that I saw there.

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“Ghost Ranch Storm” by Jurgen Wilms

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Wooden Bikes

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Here are some trophies that I made for Bike to Work Week. They were pretty fun to make. I felt like I was welding with wood glue while making the frames. The bikes do not actually function. I thought about it but that would have taken way too much time!


Visting The Des Moines Art Center: 2 Shows

Published on April 24, 2007

While in Des Moines a few weeks ago (trip 1/3 if you’re counting along at home), Sarah and I visited two old friends: the twin locations of the Des Moines Art Center.

Des Moines Art Center, Saarinen wing, photo by Cameron Campbell

For those not familiar with Des Moines, the Art Center is two amazing museums: a large building on Des Moines’ west side, with 3 wings designed by I.M. Pei, Eliel Saarinen (shown, photo by Cameron Campbell) and Richard Meier, and a new branch downtown designed for “lunch-sized” exhibitions. Surprising as it may sound to non-natives, Des Moines’ Art Center easily compares with national institutions such as SFMOMA and any art museum in Seattle. It has a solid permanent collection composed of all the American and European greats, rounded out with a dense collection of African art. Exhibitions change frequently, and they routinely showcase internationally-known and just-emerging artists. Best of all, admission is FREE.

At that price, we were able to hit both locations, and saw two completely different shows. We started with the downtown branch, and so will these notes.

Patricia Piccini's

Hug: New Work by Patricia Piccini was easily one of the strangest shows I’ve seen in awhile, with her hyper-realistic sculptures depicting creatures of an imaginary and perhaps, a none-too-distant future. If this hyper-realism gave us shivers (and it did), we were equally impressed with the great stories her work told (read the wall text). The “cover” work for the exhibition was The Young Family, 2002, and its subject was described as part human and part pig, developed as a source for human organs. Contrast that knowledge with the familiar nursing mother-and-child relationship depicted, and the work provokes some interesting thoughts.

Patricia Piccini's

Another work whose work and backstory I especially enjoyed depicted the Bodyguard for Golden Helmeted Honeyeater, a real bird facing extinction in Australia. The Bodyguardwas genetically created to act as a protector for this rare avian species, and keep it from extinction. Several photos accompanying the sculpture showed the Bodyguard after its own unintended population explosion, frolicking in urban construction sites despite the presence of construction workers. More food for thought, especially considering Australia’s choice as the setting for this fictional work, and that nation’s struggle with the Cane Toad, introduced innocently enough to combat the cane beetle, and which has since become the poster child for a species run amok.

While this show has come and gone since I visited Des Moines, it will make another appearance in 2007, this time at Seattle’s Frye Art Museum, another gem. Check it out beginning September 22, 2007.

A visit to the downtown branch of the Art Center turned up another wonderful exhibit, and one that has had me thinking a lot since I saw it in person. The Oxford Project is something I mentioned several months ago, is a project that originally tripped my radar because of my personal connection to Oxford, Iowa, and the fact that I had photographer Peter Feldstein and writer Steve Bloom as instructors while at the University of Iowa.

Iowa Honn, from the Oxford Project by Peter Feldstein and Stephen Bloom

It’s a project that I don’t want to describe too much, because it really speaks for itself. But I will give a basic setup.

In 1984, Peter Feldstein attempted to photograph every resident of Oxford, Iowa, a town about 15 miles from Iowa City, Iowa, the home of the Unversity of Iowa. 670 of Oxford’s 676 residents ended up participating. Then, 21 years later, in 2005, Feldstein returned to take another photo of any of the original 670 he could find. Stephen Bloom conducted a short interview and asked residents to talk about how their lives were in 1984, and how things had changed (or not) in the ensuing years. The stories told by the pair of photos, and in the residents’ own words, are hilarious, heartbreaking, and tell one of the most truly intimate human stories of any work of art I’ve ever seen.


Works in Progress

Published on April 20, 2007

Just so our viewers don’t think I have disappeared, I thought I would show some of projects I have been working on.

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I have added a few more branches but I still think it needs more.

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This is a prototype of a bicycle trophy for “Bike to Work Week” in Des Moines. (I am going to add pedals and mount it on a base.) Someone is commissioning me to make it. If they like it, I will make 3 more just like this one!

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This is what has really been eating up most of my time. I am making a new winerack for Cafe Di Scala. I am only half-way done with this one. When it is finished it will be able to hold more than a thousand bottles of wine!

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The beginning of the mechanical sculpture with wood gears.

I have just been working a little bit at a time on each one of these things. With the exception of the latter, I am planning on getting these projects done by May 9. Then I am going to fly down to the southwest for a week, to do sketches and take photographs of landscapes. Once I return home, I am going to do a whole series of paintings of the desert.

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I was starting to get some gear ready for the trip when Ethan decided he wanted to come along. When he is swaddled just right he fits in the backpack pretty good!