Participate in the Serendipity Treasury Challenge!

Every Tuesday and Friday a new Serendipity Treasury Challenge theme will be posted.
To participate in the challenge:
1. Have an etsy account.
2. Make a treasury (here)
3. End the title of your treasury with "- treasury challenge"
4. Post a link to your treasury in the Treasury Challenge blog entry on that topic.
5. Please put a link to the blog in your comment on the treasury. This helps people find the treasury challenge & participate.
http://www.plasticityofhappiness.blogspot.com/
6. Tag your treasury with "treasury challenge"
7. Tag your treasury with "serendipity" (or optionally, also tag your treasury with "happiness")

Saturday, February 21, 2009

23 February 2009

etsy:
“From Me to You” by Shelley Lane Kommers, etsy seller OiseauxNoir

This piece is a print of an original collage by etsy seller Shelley Lane Kommers. The composition depicts a cropped silhouette of a woman with four hearts positioned on the image plane so that they appear to be coming out of her mouth. The overall shape of the image plane is essentially square. However, a thread outline continues outside the boundaries of the square image plane. On the image plane this thread outline is just that — an outline — it follows the shape of the silhouette of the woman. But outside of the image plane this thread outline meanders abstractly; instead of doing something visually typical like completing the outline of the silhouette. The white thread acts differently outside the image plane than it does within the image plane. The silhouette of the woman presents itself as separate from the background by virtue of pattern. The silhouette consists of a shape cut out of an object, particularly a map of central France; where as the background appears to be a piece of paper with mechanical notes altered with paint to contrast the silhouette in terms of lack or obfuscation of pattern. In that the map is visually obvious as a map; it presents a typical pattern of interconnecting lines, geometric and abstract shapes, and words. The map as silhouette is presented sideways (so that the traditional text is vertically oriented instead of horizontally). From a visual standpoint the most dominant lines on the map trisect the entire shape of the silhouette, ultimately intersecting at the cheek of the woman. Also present near their point of intersection is a portion of the map that graphically represents a metropolitan area; this is visually located at the part of the silhouette where the eye would be. This creates a focal point. Also, from a point of color contrast works in collusion with another visual focal point: the four hearts. Where as the lines are red and the metropolitan area is a block of beige, the hearts are orange; as opposed to everything else on the image plane which is essentially white or very light in tone so that it’s almost white. The hearts are visually notable by means of color contrast, shape, and placement. They are juxtaposed to the silhouette so that they appear to be descending from the mouth. In this visual treatment the parts if the image act in concert with the title of the piece: “From Me to You.” As if to indicate that the silhouette representative of a woman is wishing someone by virtue of the visual presentation of symbolic hearts some communication of love.
available at:
OiseauxNoir: http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5890086

song:
“From Me to You” by the Beatles, from the album "Past Masters Volume 1"

artist: Jasper Johns
Jasper Johns, Jr. (born May 15, 1930) is a contemporary American artist known mostly for his paintings and their iconography of flags, targets, letters & numbers. He was born in Georgia, and grew up in Allendale, South Carolina. He attended the Universiy of South Carolina for three semester before leaving for New York and a brief stint at the Parsons School of Design. In New York he met Robert Rauschenberg, with whom he became a friend & contemporary. Having come to prominence during the movement of Abstract Expressionism, he is sometimes referred to as that, he is also known as a Pop Artist or Neo-Dadaist. He is most famous in art history tomes for his painting “Flag” (1954) of an American flag, and for “Painted Broze” (1960), his bronze casting of two Ballantine Ale cans.

artcyclopedia
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wikipedia
MoMA
Matthew Marks Gallery

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Sunday, February 15, 2009

16 February 2009

etsy:
“calla lilies & tree swallows” by Sarah Knight, etsy seller sarahkdesigns

This piece is a print of a digital collage. The composition consists of a combination of birds, flowers, trees, and a background which varies in color to suggest the elements of sky and ground. The composition is an abstract landscape. It is a landscape based on the use of it’s canonical images: flowers, trees, ground, sky. However, it is abstract in it’s presentation. It is a collage, and it’s trees are not of the same media and therefore visual presentation as either the birds, the flowers, or the sky and ground. The separate parts retain their separate identities as things and as parts created in a medium. And yet the image is cohesive. The image also has an active composition based on the juxtaposition of its separate parts. The composition of the image is primarily dictated by the trees, they are the visual element that contrasts dominantly against everything else in the image in terms of color contrast and in terms of linear structure. But they are not rendered to create a single focal point; nor are they juxtaposed with any of the other visual elements for the creation of a single focal point. They meander throughout the composition, and therefore create activity throughout the composition. Where as the birds are all present in the top half of the image and the flowers are all present in the bottom half of the image; this dictates a traditional landscape totem. In both cases, the tree swallows and calla lilies are present horizontally across the entire plane of the image; in other words they are active across the entire scope of the composition. The plane of varying colors that represents the background also varies in a from top to bottom. The color differentiates between reds and purples, to a light pink which blends into a sage green; lending the impression of a dawn or dusk sky over a green ground. This vertical compositional technique works in concert with the birds and flowers, from a point of color contrast and variance in shade: the top half of the picture is darker and more saturated in color than the bottom half of the picture.
available at:
sarahkdesigns: http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5531130

song:
“It's Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It)” by the Rolling Stones from the album It's Only Rock 'n' Roll

artist: Hannah Höch
Johanne Höch (November 1, 1889 – May 31, 1978) was a German artist, best known as a Dadaist for her works of collage. She studied at the College of Arts and Crafts in Berlin. For a brief period she worked for Ullstein Verlang. She joined the Berlin Dada movement in 1919 through her relationship with Rauol Hausmann. Höch was known to be bisexual and a feminist, the latter of which was often expressed in her photo collages, for which she is best known. But as a Dadaist she was not simply a feminist, she was an iconoclast opposed to propaganda of all scales; from Nazism to advertising campaigns targeted at women. She is probably best known for her work “Cut With the Kitchen Knife Dada Through the Last Weimar Beer-Belly Cultural Epoch of Germany.”

artcyclopedia
Art and Culture
wikipedia
Photomontages

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Sunday, February 8, 2009

9 February 2009

etsy:
“A New Meditation” from etsy seller blamethemoon

This piece is a print. The iconography of the image itself is an homage or an allusion to the famous Salvador Dali painting “Meditative Rose,” oil on canvas, 1958. Dali’s painting depicts a landscape with a detailed, but very much truncated by proportion, of desert-like land (typical in many of his paintings), where proportionally most of the canvas depicts sky. In the middle of Dali’s canvas is a red rose blossom; which is floating by virtue of it’s position in relation to the landscape. blamethemoon’s “A New Mediation” repeats the elements and color themes of Dali’s paining, through the landscape and red rose. It deviates from Dali’s piece in that (and mind you, my source material is a jpeg image online) this is a print of either an actual physical collage or a digital collage. So, where Dali’s piece is a painting, blamethemoon’s piece is a combination of photographs and other elements. blamethemoon’s work also differs in subject matter; in other words, it isn’t just a translation of the Dali piece by means of different media. blamethemoons piece trades the stereotypical Dali desert ground for a combination of simulated desert juxtaposed with the Cleveland skyline, as an homage to her hometown (as Dali’s desert was an homage to the geography of his childhood). Also differing in blamethemoon’s piece is the proportional ratio of ground to sky. Dali’s piece is proportionally dominated by sky, blamethemoon’s piece has a larger field of ground, and therefore less sky. blamethemoon’s work also depicts the silhouette forms of two people in the foreground. In addition to the specificity of the location, this deviation creates additional symbolism to the piece, which is differential on whether the viewer sees the two figures as walking toward or away from the skyline. Overall, blamethemoon’s piece is aesthetically pleasing: in so much that as a process, the collage elements act on the graphic plane in concert, and act consistently in their level of detail. In other words, all the elements of the image depict a consistent form (photo-realism) as opposed to one element presenting a different image quality. The image itself has immediate points of reference to the painting it serves to interpret, but the image stands on its own in terms of composition; you don’t need to be entirely aware of the original work it borrows from to derive intrigue.
available at:
blamethemoon
: http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6287639

song:
Peaches En Regalia” by Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention from the album “Hot Rats”
listen

artist:
Salvador Dali
Salvador Felipe Jacinto Dali I Domenech (11 May 1904 – 23 January 1989) was a Catalan artist best known as a Surrealist, and thus for his surrealist paintings. Dali was born in Figueres, Spain. He studied at the San Fernando Academy of Fine Arts in Madrid. He had his first one man show in Barcelona in 1925. As an artist he flirted with the styles of Cubism and Futurism before he became affiliated with Surrealism, of which he would ultimately be a dominant force and progenitor. In 1929 he met Gala Eluard, who became his muse, lover, business manager, and ultimately his wife in 1934. As a surrealist painter, Dali’s compositions were determined through his self-invented “Paranoiac-critical method.” Dali defined this as the “spontaneous method of irrational knowledge based on the critical and systematic objectivity of the associations and interpretations of delirious phenomena.” Dali’s work is best known by it canonical images: blue sky, desert landscape, melting watches, distended limbs, religious iconography, ants, and the dead olive tree. Perhaps his most well known work “The Persistence of Memory” was painted in 1931. Dali was known, not just as a painter, but as a flamboyant character perhaps just as visual as his paintings with elaborate outfits and his waxed moustache. Dali also created works as in sculpture, film, and photography.

Virtual Dali
Salvador Dali Museum
Salvador Dali Gallery
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Wikipedia

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