Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Bold As Brass--Jewelry from JCUIN

The word brazen originally meant "made of brass" and is quite old, having been in use since the beginning of the 11th century in England. The word eventually acquired the additional meanings of "strong as brass," "with the appearance of brass," or "sounding like brass." Although the word brass was used to mean "shameless" as early as the 16th century, the phrase bold as brass didn't come into use until the 18th century. This is also the period in which brazen became a common way of describing women who were considered too bold, as in "that brazen hussy." The word brassy has also been used to mean "cheap or vulgar" because brass was sometimes used as an inexpensive alternative to gold.

But I like brass. It's harder and more durable than gold, which is a real plus when a piece of jewelry will get a lot of wear. It doesn't tarnish like sterling silver or copper. And it can take a variety of patinas easily. And to help us all be as bold as brass, here's a collection of brazen jewelry from the members of the Jewelry Creators Unite in Numbers guild on ArtFire. I hope you enjoy it. Be sure to click through to see the items larger.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Oh, boy. I have no excuses here. Considering my Irish ancestry, I should probably do a post about the origins of St. Patrick's Day like I did for Valentine's Day. But St. Patrick seems like he was the type to drive anyone to drink, so...I'm just going to give it a pass as a saint's day that got converted to a celebration of national culture and a drinking holiday, which is pretty standard procedure when you think about it. The amazing thing is that it's still a religious holiday for not only Catholics but a few other religions.

As for the drinking, I blame all the drinking on the snakes, man. If I were in Ireland and thought I saw snakes, I'd want to drink too. Well, okay the snakes and the Chicago River when it's dyed green. Seeing that might make you want to keep drinking. That is, if the flying carp didn't scare you sober. LOL



I still remember taking a friend who was visiting Chicago for the first time down along the river. He asked me if the river was that color because of the dye. It was May. I was like, "Um, no. The Chicago River is always that greeny grey color." Hah! (See the photo below from Windy City Art for the everyday color.) I bet it has something to do with the area's limestone deposits. Anyone know for sure?

www.windycityart.com/chicago/bridges.htm

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Hearts and Flowers

Well, given that Valentine's Day is tomorrow, I wondered once again who the heck St. Valentine was and how a Christian saint got hooked up with a holiday celebrating romantic love. After all, most Christian saints are martyrs who met their ends amid nastiness and violence, not love poems and flower petals. So this year I decided to sit down and do some research. I was lazy, so the following is brought to you largely by Wikipedia.

As it turns out, there were several early martyrs named Valentine, and none of them had even the remotest connection with love and romance until Geoffrey Chaucer came on the scene in the 14th century. In his Parlement of Foules, a poem written in 1382 to celebrate the first anniversary of Richard II's engagement to Anne of Bohemia, Chaucer writes:
"For this was Saint Valentine's Day, when every bird cometh there to choose his mate." 
It is thought that the reference was to St. Valentine of Genoa, whose saint's day was celebrated May 2, also the day the treaty was signed providing for the marriage. The only connection between Valentine of Genoa and romance was that his saint's day happened to fall on this anniversary, and happened to be during the spring mating season for birds in England. Chaucer never could have foreseen how his poetic license would spawn an avalanche of commercialized bliss.

The further evolution of the holiday is a bit murky, but certainly by the 15th century the name of St. Valentine had become associated with love and romance in the popular imagination. (Those of us familiar with the "Sweetest Day" phenomenon can probably imagine the process pretty clearly.) February 14th was the saints' day of two more saints named Valentine. Apparently, any Valentine would do in a pinch. And thus was born Valentine's Day. Bring on the hearts and flowers!

Rose Hearts framed flower petal earrings
From my own studio on ArtFire, Daly Craftworks, come these earrings which celebrate the fact that many rose petals are heart-shaped.

Next are these beautiful heart-shaped glass earrings from Shadow Dog Designs on ArtFire. The salmon red color with the sterling silver is wonderful.

Handmade Hearts Padparadscha Swarovski OOAK earrings

I don't think I've featured anything from Chrysalis Jewelry yet, and she makes great pieces. Here are two wonderful Valentine themed bracelets. 

Valentine Charm Coral Bracelet

The first uses red coral and a gorgeous heart charm she made in fine silver. 

Desert Valentine Bracelet
The second takes a desert-hued look at the holiday, using a subdued Southwestern palette.

For our transition from hearts to flowers, here's My Girly Gear's combination of two in one! Yep, that there is a rose carved into a heart, folks.

Carved Flower Heart on Pink Jade and Black Agate necklace and earrings
Because this is my blog and I can do what I want to (do what I want to!), I will begin the flowers portion of the program with a flower photo of my own from Daly Art Works on ArtFire. This is a pink lily lovingly planted by my Dad.

Pink Lily, color, botanical flower photo 8x10

And this is a necklace lovingly made by Sage's Cupboard. Look, it's a pink lily! See, there is a method to my madness. And if you click through you can see more details of the wonderful beadwork on this and other items in her shop.

Lampwork Lily Pendant

Next is another floral lampwork piece, this time a rose pendant by Ragamuffin Jewels. Gotta love that rich burgundy shade accentuating the spiral patterns.

Pink Floral Lampwork Pendant

And I'll close with one more piece by Designs by Chaz, because I love these chain maille patterns and they always look like stylized flowers to me.

Gay Pride Celtic Vision Pendant

All of the work I've featured is by the members of the Jewelry Creators Unite in Numbers guild on ArtFire. They are a very talented group! Even though this post is ridiculously late for Valentine's Day shopping, I hope you'll agree that any of these pieces would be perfect for expressing your love and affection any day of the year. Meanwhile, have a happy Day of Christian Martyrs Transformed Via Chaucer and the French (TM), also known as Valentine's Day!

Friday, February 11, 2011

Friday, February 4, 2011

Don't You Ever Interrupt Me While I'm Reading a Book!


With over a million views, I'm sure you've seen this already. But I just saw it today, and it's brilliant. Including the random bagpipes. Enjoy!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Life is Beautiful...and Terrifying

Today was a day for photojournalism. First, I read through a book so I could return it to the library. Next, I went on-line so I could get caught up with email and the various newsfeeds and blogs I follow. I really wish now that I had done that in the opposite order.

The book I read--well, looked through is perhaps more accurate because it is actually a collection of photos with a few brief essays and quotations--is National Geographic Simply Beautiful Photographs by Annie Griffiths.


As I said, this is a collection of photos culled from the huge archive of the National Geographic Society and organized around six aesthetic concepts that the book's editors felt contributed to beautiful photographs: Light, Composition, Moment, Time, Palette, and Wonder. Photographer Annie Griffiths, in charge of the project, determined that the book would limit the concept of beauty in important ways. As it says in the book's foreword:
In creating a book that said "simply beautiful," we all wanted a set of images that would transport the reader to a beautiful place, be that space physical, emotional, or spiritual. First we had to ask ourselves, "What is the definition of beauty?" Can there be resilience and grace in tragedy? Yes. Is there an awe in a perfect mushroom cloud overpowering the horizon? Yes. But is that the beauty we wanted to portray? No.
Encouraged by the words of Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Beauty is its own excuse for being," we decided that this book should take us to a world of beautiful dreams, memories, and meditation.
The book is a visual meditation on beauty, as captured on film.  It stays away from overt politics, violence or tragedy, featuring the most attractive aspects of our world. The accompanying quotes and essays celebrate the excellence of human artistry and the ability of art to elevate human nature. It is indeed a beautiful dream.

Then I went on-line. And got another kind of human nature thrown at me in the reports and photos from Egypt. People lying beaten and bleeding, bound and clearly terrified--even from thousands of miles away, I find some of these photos terrifying, and yet I know that these have been vetted for publication and probably represent far from the worst of what there is to be seen and experienced there. As described by Anderson Cooper of CNN, this is classic mob violence:
...the crowd kept growing, kept throwing punches, kicks...suddenly a young man would look at you and punch you in the face.
One of our jobs as artists and as humans is to stand witness. We need to see clearly both the good and the bad in ourselves and our fellow humans. Life is both beautiful and terrifying, sometimes at the same time. It is not that I think artists are all sweetness and light and can do no wrong. I just wish that I felt as much faith in my fellow humans en masse as I do in my fellow artists. That is how I feel right now.

This is the often schizophrenic impetus of art, the struggle between creation and destruction in our lives. So I will witness. And later I will choose to create beauty, even from this.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

It's officially a blizzard.



It's about 10 p.m. outside of Chicago, and here is what it looks like right now. Not sure how much of this is falling snow and how much is just being blown around by the gusting wind. Pretty wild out there. Yesterday, the forecasters were predicting over a foot of snow. I don't think we've hit that yet here, but we'll see by tomorrow morning. Stay safe everyone, and stay inside!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Cross-Pollinating Art

Intellectual cross-pollination is common in the art world. It seems perfectly natural to me to take a photo and turn it into a piece of jewelry, and I expect at some point a piece of jewelry will inspire a photo or two. Today, I was working with a very direct transfer from one medium to another. I took a photo I had taken of a pair of roses, printed it on handmade paper with flower petal inclusions, cropped out two small pieces and inserted them into a pair of pre-made frame pendants to create a pair of earrings. Here is a picture of the earrings resting on the photo from which they were cropped.

Pink Roses earrings from Daly Craftworks

Later, while I was browsing through the shops of a couple of my fellow members in the JCUiN guild on ArtFire, I was interested to see a couple of pieces that could almost have been the result of a similar cross-pollination. The first pair below is a wonderful necklace by Shadow Dog Designs next to a photo I took of Waimea Canyon on Kauai. When I saw the necklace, I was immediately reminded of Waimea Canyon. "Waimea" means "red" and refers to the vivid red of the dirt on Kauai. In her description of the necklace, Catherine of Shadow Dog has this to say:

Earthy Noreena Jasper Red Flake Necklace by Shadow Dog Designs on ArtFire
"This handmade, one of a kind (OOAK) necklace was inspired by a recent trip to Alice Springs, smack dab in the middle of the Red Centre of Australia. The red, gold and gray colors of the Noreena jasper is very reminiscent of the colors of the stones and soil of the Red Centre. In fact, after doing some research about Noreena jasper, I found it comes from the Pilbara region of Western Australia. No wonder it radiated Australia to me!"
Waimea Canyon Ditch Trail from Daly Art Works on ArtFire

Storm Front 5 by 7 print by Kindred Images and Creations on ArtFire
3 Strand Rainbow Fluorite Necklace by Kindred Images and Creations on ArtFire
The second pair of images are both from a studio called Kindred Images and Creations on ArtFire. The first is a photo of a storm front off the coast of Maine. The second is a necklace made with rainbow fluorite. When I saw the photo, it reminded me of some labradorite I purchased recently. Then I saw the fluorite necklace, which has some of the same qualities. So I Googled both minerals to see if there was a relationship. Turns out both contain calcium. And labradorite is named for Labrador, Canada which is an area in Canada also on the Eastern seaboard, though far north of Maine. The name "fluorite" on the other hand, comes from the Latin fluo, meaning "to flow." It turns out it is also the state mineral of my home state of Illinois, which used to be the largest producer of the mineral in the US. Which makes sense, because it is often found in limestone. Now, one of the largest deposits in North America is found in Newfoundland, Canada which is right next door to Labrador. So we've gone full circle. 

Well, I hope everyone feels sufficiently pollinated for today!