Shadows and Slots

I am continuing to explore creating shadows with simple forms. These 3/4 plaster spheres have been filed to make a slot and then all 49 placed in a grid with the slots randomly positioned. Who knows why but looking at it makes me feel calm and peaceful, (although a little annoyed that not every sphere is in focus) must try harder. The spheres are about the size of a mint imperial, no-one has been fooled yet luckily, they could be nasty if swallowed!slots

Creating Cast Shadows

Somehow I seem to have found myself moving almost full circle in my use of scale.  I began with intricate delicate jewellery in silver and moved abruptly in a dramatic change of scale to a few bulky fabrications in painted MDF, then mild steel sculpture as big as I could make it. I yearned to go bigger, larger than life but for that you need money, strength, a whole workshop full of specialist equipment, space and hopefully a commission. After a liberating but all too brief dalliance with pleated paper and an even briefer sojourn with copper sheet, I adopted a more restrained approach,  all white sculpture on a domestic scale in a medium quite new to me until now, cast plaster. Gradually and almost without realising what was afoot, the scale has slid back down, close to jewellery sized pieces.
Throughout this whole exploration of materials and processes, runs my habitual theme of repetition, it seems to be the one constant, indeed it is undeniably quite my favourite. And of course my second favourite, the aspect that sits so well with repetition – cast shadows.

 

Sally Wakelin pleated paper installation

Relueaux Triangle Sculpture

Soft daylight casting shadows over hemispherical arrangement

48 plus one

Glenys Cour

The website I have been preparing for Glenys is almost ready to launch, here are screenshot previews of some of the pages. The links are not live yet.

I will post a link to the live site when it is ready.

Glenys Cour - The Home Page

Glenys Cour - Flora

Glenys Cour - Posters

Slots -Tim Miller

I found these great chairs – StretchOut – designed by Tim Miller who is Senior Lecturer in Industrial Design at Victoria University in New Zealand.

I have been reading about wet paper folding, now I am inspired to combine paper cutting and wet-folding and see what comes of it.

Tim Miller StretchOut chair - CUTform project

Just look at those shadows!