Upcycling: Rake Wine Glass Holder

I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this!

Discovered via the San Francisco Chronicle, it’s an awesome contrast between the fragile glasses and the rusty metal of the rake.

At the same time, you could say that the rake evokes the agricultural process from which the grapes in the wine were born.

I am a tad concerned that it could be easy to snap the stems on the glasses if they are not placed or removed carefully, but it seems pretty clear to me that this design is knowingly more about form than function.

Waste Land: Vik Muniz & The Catadores

Last night I had the pleasure, better late than never, to see the 2010 documentary Waste Land, a deeply moving, sometimes hard to watch, yet ultimately inspiring and hopeful account of Brazillian-born artist Vik Muniz‘ three-year project at the world’s largest landfil, Rio de Janeiro’s Jardim Gramacho.

Muniz, who had already become known for using found objects and other unusual materials, such as peanut butter & jelly and chocolate syrup, took these ideas to a whole other level at Jardim Gramacho, fueled by a wonderfully idealistic and altruistic mission, stated at the outset of the film: Now that he has achieved worldwide artistic and material success, it was time to give something back, to create art that changes people’s lives.

The heart of the film is the community of Catadores — workers who pick through the garbage in the dump, gleaning recyclable materials — with whom Muniz forges a real collaboration. After spending time on site, talking to and getting to know some of the Catadores, a handful of them are chosen to be the subjects of portraits by Muniz, with all eventual proceeds from the works to be donated to the subject Catadores and the ACAMJG (the Association of Recycling Pickers of Jardim Gramacho). The working conditions are practically unimaginable, the lives of the Catadores are extremely difficult, but they work hard and are proud that they have chosen to be pickers rather than drug dealers or prostitutes.

Now, when I say that Muniz collaborated with the Catadores, this collaboration went way beyond their becoming subjects for portraits. (The portraits were produced from photos of the subjects that were projected, giant-sized, onto the floor of a warehouse, the images were then filled in using all manner of refuse, and high-resolution photos were taken of the finished pieces. Click on the photos included here and zoom in to see what’s really going on.)

From collecting the materials to be used in the portraits to actually helping assemble the pieces under Muniz’ direction, these people imbued the work with their very lives and experiences.

The most moving scenes of the whole film centered on just how connected the Catadores became with the portraits, all of them brought to tears upon seeing them in their completed state from the scaffolding above. They never dreamed they’d be the subject of something so incredibly beautiful, or that something so beautiful could be born from the ugliness of Jardim Gramacho. Later, one of the subjects, Tiaõ, travels with Vik to London for an auction of his portrait, where it sold for $64,000, and he weeps while telling his mother the news over the phone. Likewise, when Tiaõ and the other subjects are brought to the Museum of Modern Art in São Paulo for the opening of an exhibit of their portraits, they are all similarly moved to tears.

As New York Times film critic Stephen Holden puts it:

It is the first confirmation from the world outside the dump that their lives matter.

Having been born lower middle class in Brazil’s largest city, São Paulo, Muniz describes at one point that many of the Catadore families were from a similar background, but ended up in Jardim Garmacho due to unfortunate circumstances.

As a result, the film has a palpable there-but-for-the-grace-of-God undercurrent.

And so, you might ask whether or not Vik Muniz met his goal of really, meaningfully changing lives.

There’s a key scene in a cozy, modern home where Muniz and his wife are arguing about the long term implications of the project. Muniz mentions that some of the Catadores have asked to keep working for him after the project is over, stating that they don’t want to go back to just being pickers. Additionally, at this point, the decision had not been made as to whether or not to bring Tiaõ to London. Muniz’ wife seems to feel that there is an unintended cruelty to exposing the Catadores to a better life only to return them to the misery of the landfill when the project is over, but Vik says that if he was in their shoes and was offered a chance to have this experience, he’d still want to have the experience even if he knew that it was a taunting and fleeting glimpse.

Ultimately, at the end of the film, we learn that most of the subjects, thanks to the royalties from the portraits, are successful in leaving Jardim Garmacho, and that other monies raised have helped the ACAMJG found a library, medical clinic, day care center, and a skills training center to help the Catadores transition to better jobs.

Really, there’s no question that lives were changed.

Eyecatchers: Mark Powell

Ok, I know I posted an Eyecatchers installment yesterday, but the following just astounded me.

So, sue me! :-)

Via Colossal, I’ve discovered the work of Mark Powell, an artist creating absolutely stunning portraits on vintage used envelopes, using only a Bic Biro pen.

Powell has a particular fascination for old, deeply wrinkled and haggard faces, and you could even say it’s a nearly morbid fascination (not many smiles here). And yet, I detect a clear empathy and compassion for his subjects, evident in the emotion you can see right below the surface or oozing out in particular facial expressions, especially via the eyes.

As a result, the work doesn’t come across as overly depressing, and some of the portraits even come ever so close to caricature, in a good way, without actually going there.

The texture and patina of the envelopes, along with the postmarks, stamps, addresses, and handwriting somehow seem fully integrated into the compositions, enhancing both the aesthetics and themes.

Do treat yourself to some time at the artist’s website, but in the meantime, here are some of my favorites:

Eyecatchers: “Bad” Photos By Good Photographers

Here’s a fun diversion!

The Guardian has a short but fascinating slideshow up today, consisting of selected photos from noted photographers, who’d been asked to talk about what they considered to be their worst shot.

Now, naturally, since these are VERY good photographers, their “worst” shots are still, in most cases, very good photographs, and sometimes the explanation they give has more to do with the subtext surrounding the subject, rather than anything technical about the shot itself.

Anyway, I love reading about the creative process behind works that don’t immediately, by themselves, tell the whole story.

Here’s my favorite shot of the bunch (But you’ll have to click on the link above to find out why it’s considered “bad” :-) ):

Upcycling: Guitar String Flowers

So, I have two primary creative outlets.

First is this here Fish & Bicycles blog thing. Second is music, guitar playing to be exact.

Awesome, then, to come across the subject of this installment of my Upcycling series: guitar strings artfully repurposed as a bouquet of flowers by Julia Friend. (via CanDoodles)

I’ve been playing guitar and changing strings every few months for something like 25 years, and it’s always struck me as unfortunate waste when those spent strings went into the trash.

I only wish I had the patience to make my own guitar string flowers. After all, as Candice at CanDoodles points out, these don’t wilt, and I’m notorious for neglecting to water my green, leafy friends.

Julia’s tutorial couldn’t make it any easier, so perhaps one of you dear readers would like to give it a try.

Eyecatchers: Terry Maker

"Point" by Terry Maker

As mentioned last week, I was just in Colorado, and I had the most pleasant surprise at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, where I discovered the work of Terry Maker.

I say “pleasant surprise” because, I admit, having never been to Colorado Springs, I had let the mountain (pun intended) of what I didn’t know about the city coalesce into low expectations of a cowpoke town, where “fine art” was limited to coffee table books.

I couldn’t have been more wrong, and I am pleased to report that The Springs, as I heard some locals refer to it, is a vibrant and charming small city, nestled up against the Front Range of the Southern Rocky Mountains.

The Fine Arts Center houses a wonderful permanent collection, ranging many periods and movements, but it was the current extensive exhibit of works by Boulder, Colorado mixed-media artist Terry Maker that just stunned me, my wife, and my son.

In order to do her work justice, the best way to describe Terry’s novel process, a process vaguely reminiscent of millefiori, is to quote her About page:

By utilizing resin, a material new to her process, and commonplace domestic objects, Maker composes and assembles elements including plates, straws, vinyl record shards, jawbreakers and more into large, resin-poured solid blocks. The artist then slices through the amply cured forms using an industrial band saw revealing her chosen cross-sections. The different and surprising views of the embedded objects sometimes identifiable, often not, present the viewer with a visual puzzle and further exploration of the artist’s unusual visual vocabulary symbolizing desire. With Maker’s process of cutting into the resulting block of amalgamated materials, she revitalizes the objects and reassigns new meaning. Revealed in the artist’s quest to investigate a new way of mark-making, “Slice” alludes to the cyclical human state of “wanting” –desire exposing layers immediate and inaccessible and offering insights both visual and metaphoric.

The lede photo above is a detail of a larger piece, made of resin and magic markers, titled “Point”. Upon inspection, as you consider the information about the materials and the process, a gradual awareness emerges of just what it is you’re looking at. As much as, if not more than, any art I’ve seen over the years, Maker’s work compels you to view it from varying distances and angles, making the visit to the gallery a continuous exercise in curiosity and revelation.

Sadly, photos just can’t capture the totality of the Terry Maker experience, so if you ever get a chance to see her work in person I highly recommend that you jump at the opportunity. Otherwise, it will be at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center through June 3, 2012.

Here are some of my faves (Be sure to click on the images to enlarge!):

"Point" - resin, magic markers

"Magic Marks" - resin, magic markers, pens, pencils, erasers

"Akeldama" - resin, drinking straws, shredded church documents

"Akeldama" (detail) - resin, drinking straws, shredded church documents

"Collection Plate" - resin, church documents, shredded money

"Collection Plate" (detail) - resin, church documents, shredded money

"Drool" (detail) - resin, jawbreaker candy, anatomical skulls