Characterized Vessels

Hi! my name is Young-I Kim and I live in Hildesheim. I am orginal from South Korea but I live since 2002 in Germany. I studied metaldesign at the HAWK Hildesheim and graduated 2009.

My work’s title is “Characterized Vessels”.
In this work I have made vessels with which I show the characters of people.
I have chosen people whom I care for and who are dear to me.
It was important for me that I do not only lay emphasis on these persons’ outward appearances but their habits, peculiarities, manners of speaking and expressions as well as their facial expressions and postures, from which a person’s character can be more immediately inferred. These considerations have helped me to distinguish between the different character profiles. In order to give still more sense and meaning to the whole, I have used colour by means of enamelling technique.

MA Degree Show Work

Hello fellow exchangers!  My name is Kirsty and I graduated from Edinburgh College of Art with an MA in 2010.  I am interested in the contrast between the indeterminate results of patina and the controlled process of workmanship.  My work focuses on transient beauty and impermanence; combining shards of decay with contemporary structure.  Here are some images of my degree show work:

An organised messIntrigued by the effects of time and decay, especially places and objects that have fallen into a state of disrepair I explore this condition of neglect in enamel, playing with both control and unpredictability. The resulting work is unpredictable and unexpected; a product of a process deliberately out of my control. Undetermined paintings of rust-coloured patterns, created by nature and left to chance, are trapped within liner frameworks. By isolating sections of a surface, much like the viewfinder of a camera, or the framing and judgement of the photographer, the viewer is compelled to focus on the unusual natural beauty framed within.

This collection of jewellery focuses on the beauty of surface decay and the resulting work appears as a series of snapshots of surfaces frozen in time.

The exchange begins…

Colony brooch

 

Vase fragment

 

Cluster pendant

Hi fellow heat-exchangers! (and visitors to and followers of the project!)

Katrina Tyler here writing from my home-based studio in Melbourne, Victoria.

I’m so excited to be a part of the Heat Exchange project as I’m passionate about enamel and looking forward to getting well underway with making, getting to know more about each aritsts practice, and exchanging ideas, methods and directions with works incorporating enamel.

Documenting and developing my work in this open, collaborative manner online is new to me, and I’m curious and to see how it affects my practice and the direction of all of our work over the coming months.

Since graduating from my MFA at RMIT at the end of 2010, I have set up a home-based studio. With this shift away from a communal studio environment, my making process has tended towards the insular and solitary. The opportunity to collaborate online, and share experiences of a process I love is one I will embrace!

The works I have in mind as a starting point for Heat Exchange will be small scale sculptural objects. My use of enamel in recent times has been bold accents of a single colour, applied with the wet-packing technique. I want to experiment with enamels that can be painted on and explore a few more techniques in my work.

Look forward to reading more about everyone’s work and processes soon.

Ciao for now and happy making!

x Katrina

My recent works … Naoko

Hello heat-exchangers!

I am Naoko, from Melbourne, Australia. I am currently doing a residency at RMIT University in Melbourne, learning from Dr. Kirsten Haydon.

I came to Australia from Japan 7 years ago and my experiences and findings in between two cultures has been the catalyst of my creativity.

I am thrilled to be a part of the exhibition, and looking forward to seeing everyone’s creative journey!

Here is a shot of my studio…

and me.

and now to work…

The Beauty of Innuendo 1, Barbara Ryman, 2005. Sugar fired vitreous enamel on copper, with pierced Sterling Silver centre piece.

I made a big move earlier this year so I am enjoying a new adventure. I love my new house and area but of course along with that goes huge amounts of dissruption. The initial task was to find a builder to transform a double garage into my studio. There was quite a wait between finding a nice builder then actually getting the work done. Next came painting and finally the pleasure of bringing in all my ‘stuff’ and settling it into a comfortable working arrangement. I love it when my workshop is just right, that is, when I reach for something it’s right there under my hand. I have always found the activity of arranging and re-arranging extremely useful for getting started. Sometimes I get frustrated that I can’t go straight into the work but I have learned to trust this fiddling around as a vital part of getting in the zone for work.

I feel as though I ‘wear’ my studio. It becomes a space that is separate to normal life, a creative haven, and it has it’s own time zone and sometimes no time at all.

The timing of the building work was such that I had seven bench days to make a special piece of work for the Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor exhibition in Gallery Artisan, Queensland Australia (see Melissa Cameron’s entry on 1st November for more detail). I had to work amongst a big pile of rubble, but I was so happy being able to do my first piece in my new studio. My work was about Grace Cossington Smith, a painter who in fact lived a few streets away from where I grew up. I have always admired her work. She used a colourful palette and a textural layering of vibrating colours onto the canvas. I tried to reflect those aspects in my brooch. The textural firing of the enamel is a technique I explored in a year of post graduate study. The image at the top of my page is a table object from that period.

Cossington, Barbara Ryman, 2011. Underfired Vitreous enamel, sterling Silver Brooch

I have now layed out all my recent work that was interrupted by the move. Of course I am still completey out of kilter with my work routine and creative processes but as I lay out work and enamels and colour samples, I circle all these delicious items and I feel a little shiver of anticipation of what’s to come.

a little light reading…

I’ve been reading up on René Descartes, the philosopher/mathematician. The guy who had a whole coordinate system named after him, as he provided the link between algebra and geometry on which the later Cartesian system was based. (The name he took, in Latin publications, was Cartesius)

I can’t say that I was much of a fan of him when I was first studying maths, but I have become more interested over time, mostly through the practical applications of his works that I use constantly in Cad drawing software. At the corner of the screen in which I work (the AutoCad image above,) there is always an x,y axis to remind me that I’m working in Cartesian space.

I’m reading his text Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason, and Seeking Truth in the Sciences. My work has mined the cross as a motif before, so I’ve turned to the master for some inspiration, sparked off by the axis (and the AutoCad crosshairs don’t hurt) that I see so often.

 

 

Recent work and a snapshot of my workshop

The pieces above were created for two exhibitions in August 2011:  ‘Momentum’ in Craft in the Bay, Cardiff, which brought together a very interesting group of artists who all use digital technologies at some point in the creation of their work. All also shared a passion for the ‘hand-made’ and the beauty of the artefact. For this exhibition I focused on the laser, aiming to create works of ever increasing intricacy. The other exhibition ‘Drawing, Permanence and Place’ was exhibited at the Kunstverein Coburg in Germany. The main focus was on drawing adding permanence with the richness of vitreous enamel. It was a wonderful exhibition with an exciting breadth of works by very varied artists. I am sure there will be more from Elizabeth Turrell and Jessica Turrell who also took part. Two catalogues accompanied the exhibitions with major essays and statements by the artists. Should anybody like to see all the images and texts, please e-mail me and I can send you a PDF. Here I concentrated on drawing in relation to the water jet cutter.

Questions relating to place, location and by extension dislocation and movement, are a continuous focus in my work. I am interested in the space ‘in-between’, speaking of distance, borderland and a positioning of identity. Language occupies an important part in this inquiry, the idea of the ‘translator’ and the use of the ‘mother tongue’ as orientation, home and dwelling rather than physical location.

It is the fragmentary nature of a nomadic existence that underlies much of my work, the fragile theoretical armature by which all kinds of personal narratives and pictorial elements are joined together from many sources, written and visual as well as from direct observations.

Both recent exhibitions took as their starting point Walter Benjamin’s writing and, in particular, the ‘Arcades Project’. For Benjamin the Paris arcades represented one of the fundamental early examples of the continuous interpenetration of inner and outer space. It is this simultaneity of outside and inside, past and present, found elements and texts that inspired my wish to research his writing. I spent some time in Paris walking, observing, photographing, sketching and generally gathering visual imagery.

There is still much to do and to discover. I am thinking of naming my project for Phoenix ‘Heat Mapping’, further exploring Walter Benjamin, but also working more with the laser and engraving the enamel after firing and stoning, taking further my experiments such as in the image below.

Finally, an image of me sitting in front of my ‘pin wall’. I cut everything in paper first before committing to the laser or water jet.

And my workshop

 

 

A vessel, some brooches, and an artist’s bench …

Hello!

Inari here from Melbourne, Australia. Just a short introduction – here are some images of etching a vessel to be enamelled, and a few brooches. The main material focus of my work has been liquid enamel on steel (be it plate, safety pins or wire), inspired by Elizabeth Turrell’s workshop in Perth in April 2010, and supported by Dr Kirsten Haydon here at “home”, both legends and fellow Heat Exchangers.

The works above are all from late 2010 as I’ve had a year off making, doing written research only, but I’m currently returning to the glow of the kiln with open arms, and keen to delve into mad experiments with enamel again over the coming months.

At the end, I’ve included a little snapshot of pieces under construction on my bench at RMIT University where I’m currently undertaking Honours in Gold & Silversmithing.

Really looking forward to developing ideas and pieces for Heat Exchange, as well as interacting with everyone.

Cheers,
Inari Kiuru
ikiuru@iinet.net.au
www.inarikiuru.blogspot.com

Recent enamelled work

Infinity Affinity, Melissa Cameron, 2011. Mild steel baking tin, stainless steel, vitreous enamel

This piece is called Infinity Affinity, and was made in honour of Professor Ethel Harriet Raybould, the first female academic at the University of Queensland in Australia. It was made for the Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor exhibition, curated by Kirsten Fitzpatrick for Gallery Artisan, in Brisbane, Queensland. The exhibition celebrates 100 years of International Women’s Day, by bringing together 100 Australian and Australia-based female artists to make 100 brooches for 100 famous Australian women.

Infinity Affinity (side view), Melissa Cameron, 2011. Mild steel baking tin, stainless steel, vitreous enamel
Infinity Affinity (image with tin), Melissa Cameron, 2011. Mild steel baking tin, stainless steel, vitreous enamel. Image by Rod Buchholz assisted by Andrea Higgins

The work was hand-sawn from a Willow pie dish to commemorate the fact that in order to put herself through university, Professor Raybould earned a living lecturing in Domestic Science for the Education Department in Queensland. This was because there were no scholarships available to women in the 1920’s, and because her parents did not approve of her continuing education. She first filled in for another staff member in the Mathematics department in 1930, and eventually went on to study at Columbia University for two years, returning in 1939. On her return she was reinstated as a lecturer at the University of Queensland, from where she eventually retired in 1955.

Gallery Artisan is located in Brisbane, Australia.

The exhibition will continue touring around Australia throughout 2012-2013.

Introducing…

We’d like to introduce the artists participating in Heat Exchange. Below is an image of each of their works.

Elizabeth Turrell - United Kingdom
Beate Gegenwart - United Kingdom/Germany
Melissa Cameron - Australia
Jessica Turrell - United Kingdom
Kathleen Browne - United States
Inari Kiuru - Australia/Finland
Gretchen Goss - United States
Christine Graf - Germany
Astrid Keller - Germany
Kirsten Haydon - Australia
Young-I Kim - Germany
Agnes von Rimscha - Germany
Naoko Inuzuka - Australia/Japan
Barbara Ryman - Australia
Katrina Tyler - Australia

artists exchanging energy