The Peculiar, the Creepy and the Unfamiliar, the Unknown, The Frightening, Eerie, Disturbing, Sinister,Unexpected, Odd, Unusual, Strange
Monday, December 23, 2013
Georgia Russell: Fantastic Book Artist
Georgia Russell is a Scottish artist who slashes, cuts and dissects printed matter, transforming books, music scores, maps, newspapers and photographs. Russell has been represented by England & Co since she graduated from the Royal College of Art, and her numerous solo and group exhibitions with the gallery have led to her work being acquired by The Victoria and Albert Museum and lent to exhibitions in museums in Europe, Canada and the USA, including the Museum of Art & Design, New York for Slash: Paper Under the Knife in 2009-10. Russell featured in the England & Co exhibitions Persistent Obsessions and The Map Is Not the Territory Revisited, and with the gallery at the Zoo Art Fair in 2009. Georgia Russell: Cutting Through Time was her fifth solo exhibition with England & Co. Russell has also exhibited recently in Paris, where one of her works was acquired by the Centre Georges Pompidou.
Read more about her in the magazine Hi Fructose.
Friday, September 13, 2013
Walter Potter's Curious World of Taxidermy
The curious world of Walter Potter – in pictures
Walter Potter (1835-1918) was an amateur taxidermist who built tableaux that became icons of Victorian whimsy. A new book by historian of taxidermy Dr Pat Moris and New York-based artist and curator Joanna Ebenstein seeks to preserve and celebrate the now-dispersed collection with new photographs of his best-loved works
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Frédérique Morrel's Incredible Tapestry Sculptures
Lucky are those that own a piece of sculpture by Frédérique Morrel. Her one of kind tapestry covered animals, skulls, and furniture pieces and are highly sought after. I discovered her work in the latest issue of Hi Fructose magazine, where you can read about Morrel and her enchanting fanciful beasts.
Morrel and her husband creatively take fiberglass taxidermy
molds which are later injected with expanding foam, to covering the form. She begins each work with fiberglass molds injected with expanding foam and then reinforces them with steel rods. Then the vintage tapestries are applied by hand to the form.
They then cover these forms with vintage tapestries and embroideries she collects. They use tapestries to convey a narrative through the use of tradition, erotic and kitschy pieces they find in flea markets and antique shows. Morrel also uses real antlers, teeth, feathers and fur. She makes a point to reiterate she uses all found materials; no animals are hurt for these creations.
Morrel sees the art of tapestry and embroidery as a link
to the past, each piece tells a story. Her interest in this needlework began as
a child when she helped her grandmother create a large-scale tapestry of a boar
in homage to her grandfather. She has created her own image of the boar and one
of her large scale pieces in the series Visitors. She likens
tapestries to something to be cherished and remembered and she takes
an old fashioned craft and makes it
into something contemporary.
Read more about her work on this blog, If It's Hip, It's Here
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Dioramas of Death: The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death
Sometimes you com across an artist and a book that you are mesmerized by. That is how you may feel when you look at this book, The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death. These small studies of crime scenes and death by Frances Glessner Lee are extraordinary glimpses into the world of forensics in a deadly miniature scale.
Frances Glessner Lee was a very wealthy grandmother who founded the Department of Legal medicine at Harvard in 1936. She was also a police captain in New Hampshire so she certainly had the background to complete these highly detailed scenes of murder and mayhem. She was meticulous in her work and brought this preciseness to her dioramas. These aren't pretty scenes, these are rooms full of blood and death.
She took her experience and in the 1940s and 1950s built these dollhouse scenes based on real crimes. She used her murderous dollhouses to train detectives to solve real crimes. These 18 dioramas are still used today to solves crimes.
The 18 dioramas are built on a scale of 1:12. What is incredible about them is the level of detail put into every room she built. Lee did not overlook any detail, furniture, shoes, pencils, bloodstained rugs, wallpaper, mirrors, dolls, a mouse made from a pussy willow, kitchen utensils, all play a part in this fantastic yet deadly world of crime solving.
The level of detail she learned from working as police officer to solve crimes she brought to creating her nutshell scenes. She constructed three nutshells a year. Lee made each miniature corpse herself, with bisque parts used for German dolls.She painted each face in tones as to indicate how long the person lay there deceased. She painted one doll a crimson pink to indicate carbon monoxide poisoning. She made all the doll clothes herself. She knit stocking with needles the size of straight pins.
Lee used a carpenter friend who helped her build the rooms. For the interior scenes she used many of the miniature objects she collected from her travels around the world. Kitchen accessories, mirrors, fixtures, shrubs, cars, fabrics all made their way into her scenes. Wallpaper was picked from wallpaper books to reflect the victim's lifestyle. She worked from police reports and photographs and changed things to make the crime harder to solve.
Corinne May Botz's color photographs draw you into the crime scenes and capture every small detail. She portrays Lee's world presenting the dark side of domestic life, unveiling tales of prostitution, alcoholism, and adultery. The accompanying line drawings, specially prepared for this volume, highlight the noteworthy forensic evidence in each case. Botz's introductory essay, which draws on archival research and interviews with Lee's family and police colleagues, presents an incredible portrait of this fascinating woman.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Sharon Core: Early American
Are the works of Sharon Core paintings or photographs? One thing is certain, they are beautiful, and they are photographs. To write about this new book of her photographs, called Early American, one must understand the work of American artist Raphaelle Peale.
To create her realistic photographs, Sharon Core looked to American still-life painter Raphaelle Peale (1774-1825)
for inspiration. Core created these old-master styled photos with fruit she
grew, and with period porcelain and table settings she has collected to duplicate the
works of Peale. American painter Raphaelle Peale was the son of well-known
artist, Charles Wilson Peale. The elder Peale is best known for his painting,
The Artist in His Museum.
The Artist in His Museum
The younger
Peale’s work was quite different from his father’s and his contemporaries.
Raphaelle was drawn to the quietness of the still life, he creates
almost an austere or
melancholy atmosphere within his paintings. Peale avoided any suggestion of opulence as often
seen in 17th century Dutch still life.
By the age of twenty-one, Raphaelle Peale was
recognized as America’s first and leading still life painter and between
1812 and 1825 he painted over one hundred of them. Most of Peale's paintings are small in scale. He left a legacy of vibrant jewel like still
lifes depicting objects such as fruit, vegetables, and meat.
Peale’s paintings differ from his contemporaries with the strange
atmosphere he has created within them. His still lifes take on a strange
quality, they seem to take on the artist’s own body. American art scholar, Alexander
Nemerov has written extensively on the younger Peale and he seems to feel the
still life objects are imitations of Peale’s own body. Nemerov writes “Raphaelle’s
paintings simulate the artist’s own physical existence projected into the objects
of perception.”
Core’s photographs depict the younger Peale’s work down to
the last detail. It took her many long hours to track down the seeds necessary
to grow the heirloom species depicted in Peale’s work. She had to hunt down through flea markets and
Ebay the Chinese porcelain and tableware prevalent in his canvases. Core has made note of the strange physical characteristics
in Peale’s work that scholar Nemerov has noted. Peale placed scars and bruising on his objects almost to make them extensions of his own body so Core has made sure we see slight
traces of life in these in inanimate objects, such as bruises, scars, and the rotting flesh of the food. Some fruit seem to caress another piece through a “finger”
as seen in Lemons, (plate 18 in the book). In the photograph Apples in a Porcelain Basket (plate 6) we can almost see an “eye”
depicted as a rotting area on one of the apples. Brian Sholis who wrote the essay for the
book, Early American, says, “ they display the physical presence and variety of
human bodies.”
Core has paid close attention to the lighting Peale used and
how he placed his objects. From Peale’s paintings to Core’s photographs the
diffused lighting source is not known and the backdrops seem to disappear. Compositionally
Core has placed the objects exactly life Peale’s, objects are centered and tend
to be arranged in pyramids. Peale placed his objects very close to the viewer
so one could see all of their detail and Core has followed this compositional detail
as well.
As much as Core seems to depict Peale’s work down to the
last detail such as securing the exact same piece of porcelain Peals used she
has used his work as mimesis for her work. Peale used flat canvas and paint to give dimensionality
to his work while Core uses her camera to make the dimensional objects in front
of her to look like flat yet highly detailed reproductions of Peale’s work.
Read more:
Read more:
PAINTERLY STRUGGLE: CONFLICT AND RESOLUTION WITHIN RAPHAELLE
PEALE’S STILL LIFE PAINTINGS by Jason Frederick
The American Pioneer of Still Life by Edward J. Sozanski
Art Show: Sharon Core by Vicky Lowry
In Focus: Sharon Core
Saturday, January 12, 2013
The Photography of Rosamond Purcell
Northern Masked Weaver
"Purcell is fixed....on the state of decay. This bent is evident in her exceptional new volume, Bookworm, which recasts mangled texts as works of art."
.....David Pescovitz, Slate Online, November 9, 2006
Rosamond Purcell: Photographer of Decay
Once attracted to subjects that critics considered grotesque, photographer-author Rosamond Purcell turned her attention to the old, the burnt, and the destroyed. In these objects, she finds beauty and truth.
Whether it is a deceased animal, a decayed book, or an eerie specimen from a medical museum, many don’t find beauty in death or decay. We tend to be afraid of things we don’t understand. Thankfully there are a number of photographers who provide an insight into that which frightens and disturbs many. Photographers such as Joel-Peter Witkin, Kate Breakey, and Rosamond Purcell (under construction but see links below) offer visions into these worlds.
Purcell is one who looks past what others may see as a monstrosity or as an item to be tossed having no value. She turns these things into serenely beautiful photographs. Her eye sees historical images and artifacts, and helps us delight in the unusual and to see connections to our own evolution. Long before wunderkammer or cabinets or curiosity became mainstream, Purcell was out there documenting these repositories full of wondrous and exotic objects.
The Boston based artist is known for her portraits of decay, museum collections, and fractured found objects and is often referred to as the “doyenne of decay.” In her book, Egg & Nest, Purcell worked with the ornithological collections of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology. Here she takes close up photographs of eggs and nests, things others may toss away as meaningless. She forces us to view them in detail forcing us to see them as sublime objects, forcing us to realize their color and texture.
An egg of the Red-winged Blackbird with its black markings looks like Chinese characters or nature’s calligraphy.
A nest of Bullock’s Oriole looks like sticks with intertwined with colors of yarn, but it is composed primarily of pieces of plastic.
One last image from this book is a detail of a Common Tailorbird nest. These birds actually sew leaves together with stitches of spider silk, caterpillar silk, and plant down. They use their bills as needles.
Purcell takes the time to focus on the intricacy of the nests and the perfection of the bird eggs. A blue egg photographed alone becomes a blue planet and together look like eggs from an Easter basket. A Woodpecker’s nest resembles a wooden shoe. Yes these nests are marvels of natural history and Purcell turns them into objects of art.
"Purcell is fixed....on the state of decay. This bent is evident in her exceptional new volume, Bookworm, which recasts mangled texts as works of art."
.....David Pescovitz, Slate Online, November 9, 2006
Purcell’s next book of photographs is called Bookworm. For most of us books are here to convey information, not many see the beauty in a decayed worm-eaten tome. When books decay and are invaded by mold and insects, Purcell sees them as objects that convey a different sort of information, beauty in burned, molded, the shredded, and the mildewed. She teaches us to read differently and to see beauty in the not so pretty.
In this first retrospective of her work we see a 19th century French economics text re-interpreted by foraging termites and books burned beyond recognition. They may be filled with foraging termites and burned black, but she photographs them to put forth a new type of information, an appreciation for deterioration and purification. She photographs books as if they are the last remnants of civilization.
These are books as they were not meant to be. These photos may be more interesting than the text, some almost taking on the look of a handmade book or a pulled print. Some of the books have become nests for creatures that have passed on, with their skeletons embedded into the book’s pages. Bookworm's reproductions are imaginative evidence of those processes that render literal meaning irrelevant.
Purcell is fixated on finding beauty and the exquisite in what she photographs, but her eyes see these differently than many of us do. She makes us question, what is a beauty, what is a monster? Can we find and see the exquisite as she does? As with the photographer Witkin, some of her subjects may be physically “damaged” but she still sees intelligence and alluring qualities that make them captivating to the viewer.
In her book, Special Cases: Natural Anomalies and Historical Monsters, Purcell explores the differences in us. She has taken photographs at natural history and anatomical museums, has used models of her own creation, and used artwork from numerous private and public collections. With her photographs she delves in subjects such as dwarves, giants, conjoined twins, hairy people, albinos, and humans with animal heads.
One of her photos shops a hydrocephalic child where the skull has opened. Horrifying, no. Instead Purcell’s photograph of this subject shows how the skull appears to have opened like the petals of a flower.
The passion for collecting is a full time job, an obsession. All collectors seem to have one thing in common, they believe passionately in what they collect. In the book Finders, Keepers, Eight Collectors, Purcell teams up with paleontologist Stephen Gould to look at this collecting obsession. Together they look at collections that span 300 years from the monarch Peter the Great to the wealthy Lord Rothschild, collections from a blind ornithologist van Wickevoort-Crommelin to amateurs and their fossil finds.
In the photographer's afterword from the book she says, "She is intrigued by the relationship of collectors or curators to their collections, in short the grey area between a rational scientific system and human idiosyncrasies." She has found whether a private instruction or a person living in the country collecting what they find of interest, both have a instinct to arrange them systematically to they can find them and try to make sense of them.
Below are some photographs from the book. Again, many find these to be disturbing, but Purcell photographs them in a way to make them strangely compelling. Maybe we find them compelling because they are things we do not see everyday.
A rusted old typewriter from Owls Head
Whatever Purcell photographs she takes the mundane and recasts it as an extraordinary object.
Some links to information about the world of Rosamond Purcell
In the photographer's afterword from the book she says, "She is intrigued by the relationship of collectors or curators to their collections, in short the grey area between a rational scientific system and human idiosyncrasies." She has found whether a private instruction or a person living in the country collecting what they find of interest, both have a instinct to arrange them systematically to they can find them and try to make sense of them.
Below are some photographs from the book. Again, many find these to be disturbing, but Purcell photographs them in a way to make them strangely compelling. Maybe we find them compelling because they are things we do not see everyday.
Albino Bird of Paradise
Naturalist Willem Cornelis van Heurn's Frogs in Jars and other Miscellani
Arm holding an eye socket, Collection Albinus, Leiden
On her way to Owls Head Lighthouse in Maine, she came across a piece of property that was once an antique shop. William Buckminster owns the property and became the subject of her book Owls Head. His property is 11 acres packed with stuff. She found many many decayed objects including a massive collection wooden lobster buoys, scrap metal and wooden windows all heaped together. garbage Broken clocks, an old typewriter, birdhouses, ruined chandeliers, moldy books all in piles were dug through and photographed in black and white. You'll have to read the book to discover what Buckminster's most prized possession.
'Owls Head,' She Finds Art in the Overlooked. Listen to NPR interview
Photographer Rosamond Purcell explains her process working with scholar Michael Witmore to create the unique images seen in the Folger Shakespeare Library exhibition, "Very Like a Whale." For more information, Very Much Like a Whale.
“Till That Her Garments.” Photograph by Rosamond Purcell
From the Folger Shakespeare Library
Some links to information about the world of Rosamond Purcell
Books by Purcell
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