Wednesday, August 7, 2024

2024 08 Both the Prophecy and the Ambush of Hearing It

 


One of the things all artists need to learn is that the original idea for a piece may not be what eventually becomes your art project. 


I have long been a fan of the assemblages by Kris Kuksi from Kansas. The amount of artistry in just one piece of his is overwhelming. I thought: well, let's give this a try. 


I got this toy military helmet set at a flea market because...well, who wouldn't?



After seeing an exhibition at the Grohmann (Milwaukee School of Engineering) that used foundry sand mold forms, I have been drawn to use the ones that I have in my stash. 


Here is how I decided my Kuksi-inspired piece would begin. 

This old cabinet drawer would be the substrate



I thought this shelf would make a cool god-like overseer to the central figure

Never underestimate what ridiculous stuff can be used in your piece

These plastic hands were at the Dollar Store





The whole Kuksi thing went out the window pretty quick. I did manage to get a few figures on the helmet lion but I never could conceptualize the style so I just went back to me. 








Stencils were used to decorate the side of the cabinet



Thus we have Both the Prophecy and the Ambush of Hearing It. The title comes from Hala Alyan's poem, Relapse Dream Ending With My Grandmother’s Hands. The piece is 27"H X 16"W X 11"D and pretty darn heavy! It consists of a Drawer, Shelf, Wood Foundry Sand Casting Form, Earrings (2), Bocce Balls (2), Metal Folding Basket, Toy Military Helmet, Doll Head, HO Figurines (3), Plastic Hands (2), Eyes (2), Ceramic Figure, Muskrat Skull, Jewelry Findings (2), Metal Finding, Cotton, Rust Dyed Paper, Paper and Paint.





Monday, August 5, 2024

2024 08 Isla de las Muñecas

This project began with the online assemblage class taught by Michael de Meng called Fractured Fairytales. I decided that my story was going to be based on Mexico's Isla de las Muñecas (Island of the Dolls) that I had a chance to visit in 2016 on a Michael de Meng workshop in Mexico City. 

The island now known as Isla de las Muñecas today is in the water channels south of Mexico City at Xochimilco. The original owner of the island was Don Julián Santana Barrera.

The legend is that Barrera discovered a drowned girl in the canal. The next day he found her doll floating in the river and hung it as tribute to the dead girl. To ward off bad juju, he continue to add to the doll collection.

By 1943, the location was famous enough to make it into the film María Candelaria by director Emilio Fernández. 

The legend continued to build when in 2001, at the age of 80, he drowned supposedly in the spot where he found the girl. 

To reach the island today you ride in a trajineras which is rowed by a pilot.



Barrera's survivors continue to operate the location as a tourist attraction. Part of the ritual of visiting the island now is to hear a survivor of Barrera tell the eerie tale of the island while sitting in front of the founder.

Of course, the highlight of the trip is the dolls strewn around the island.





Michael's hopes for our project in the Fractured Fairytale workshop was to make a number of panels that would illustrate your choice. I decided that the structure of an old clock would give me the three spaces that I was looking for. 

The clock, a wood boat and what I believe might be a glass cigarette ashtray


I had to add two river beds to the clock

The trees were made out of rebar wire

The bark was made out of paper mache


Warning: if you ever decide to use a dremel on a plaster item, DO IT OUTSIDE

I decided to incorporate this photograph of the island's guide that I took in 2016. 



The lowest panel of this piece appropriately represents the original drowning victim found by Don Julián Santana Barrera. I used resin to create the water.



The middle part of this piece represents the slow ride down the channel to Isla de las Muñecas.

Each boat on the river has a name




The top part of the piece and the trees are representative of the absolutely magnificent dolls of Isla de las Muñecas.






Thus we have Isla de las Muñecas. It is 21"H X 22"W X 8"D. It consists of a Clock Body, Plaster Doll Head, Photograph, Wood Boat, Glass Cigarette Ash Tray, Artificial Flowers, Toy Cowboy, Plastic Baby Dolls (16), Resin, Plaster Cast, Paper Mache  and Paint.