Posts tagged art.

Biannual Open Studios weekend

Last weekend, actually the one before that, was the second open studio event in Charlotte Street Foundation’s Biannual Open Studios event.

I love the excitement building up to these events; you start seeing you fellow artists more and more as the day gets closer.

The event went great for Umbratorium. I met a lot of great people, sold almost all of the pieces I prepared for the event, and shared my work with friends and strangers alike.

I found out the other day that my studio had received the most votes for “favorite visual artist studio” at event, Yeay!

Thank you, all, so much for visiting and being awesome supporters of art.

Setting up

Ice intallations

Photogravure

Music for the Eyes

I have been contemplating on and collecting materials for a series of installations.  Not knowing when or where I would realize this concept, I have been keeping the items in boxes, and ideas in my sketch books until their time comes.  Last weekend, in the studio, I decided to start taking them out and giving them a story.  It is very exciting to be working on this. And now this piece is on the wall of my studio, and I love it! I don’t know if I would keep this idea for the blue headphones, but for now, they can float on the surface with imaginary  - or collective - vibrations of a time passed, awakening the dormant sounds captured in their memory.

Open Stuidos weekend

 

Charlotte Street Foundation Open Studios weekend was just great. I was inspired by the work fellow artists put out, and felt thrilled to be a part of such creativity. 

As much as I appreciated all the interest Umbratorium received, I have to admit that (hoping to not offend anybody who visited) the highlight of the event was Maya & Luka’s visit (I apologize to both of them if I misspelled their names). Maya & Luka came to check out the studio with their parents, and were very much interested in what my old-fashioned overhead projector had to offer. They are so creative and perceptive that they started experimenting right on the spot, which was simply a thrill for me!

Here are Maya & Luka during their studio visit:

They experimented with variety of materials. And Maya created a beautiful piece of work using some of the dry plants I have been saving for a project. It turned out, the little petals were waiting for Maya to come over and give them a new life on the projector.

Here’s the beautiful work by Maya:

I don’t need to say a word about the beauty this image exudes. The leaves take the form of a hummingbird, a dolphin, or a brush stroke of a sumi-o artist…depending on the imagination of the looker.  Thank you Maya for your beautiful contribution to Umbratorium.

I want to thank Maya, Luka, and their parents along with everyone else who visited my studio during open studios weekend.  You’re always welcome to drop by.  Keep on inventing shadows!

hugs,

nihan

Shadow on Yellow by ~J-Skellington

Close Encounters

I have been meaning to write about Ayhan Gunaydin’s “Close Encounters” series for a very long time, now.  The reason I couldn’t get around to it was that I tried to find the words that would be able to (even remotely) express how I feel about them.

He published the “encounters” on March 13, 2010.  It wouldn’t be an exaggeration if I say that they took my breath away as soon as I saw them.  I wasn’t actively practicing my projection art back then, but I guess, it was brewing in my subconscious and the series hit a sensitive spot deep in there.

This series is not just shadows on the street. There is quietening poetry.  They flare up the imagination with playful notes and movement.  The light source has a direction and turns into a spotlight for the headliner; maybe they are a child’s daydreams.  Light, subject, and action transcend original motive; shadows create a life of their own.

I found a convergence the other day.  I will post it soon.  Meanwhile check out more of Ayhan

New studio space

I haven’t been keeping up with posting the “lab results” but  there’s been so much happening.

I have a lot to share for so much production took place in the last few weeks.  One good news that I am thrilled to share is that I am granted a visual arts studio residency from Charlotte Street Foundation Urban Spaces Studio Residency program. 

Yesterday, I attended the orientation meeting where I got a chance to meet with other artists and see my new studio.  I am very excited to set it up and start working. Umbratorium will move to its new work space this week.

One new personal project I came up with is to make a visual documentation of the process. How the studio is started and, hopefully, where it will be in one year from now.

There is so much potential, I cannot sit still.  It was also my birthday yesterday, so thank you, CHF  for the awesome birthday present!

Sometimes, a shadow can create more fear than the source itself…

Love in the Kitchen

“Plato would think that a traffic light is something like this.”  

Platonic Shadows by J-Skellington

Platonic Shadows II by J-Skellington