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WELCOME TO CEREBRAL BOINKFEST!

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Showing posts with label paper art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paper art. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Recycling Paper Into Art: Junior Fritz Jacquet


Junior Fritz Jacquet creates sculptures of paper.  The Haitian-born Parisian works in all kinds of paper creating abstract sculptures and human figures, including masks.  His interest began at age 14 when he first learned about origami.  He took to the art medium immediately, and continues to explore it, pushing it beyond its traditional art forms.

Three Men in a Sphere 2, image courtesy of www.origami-kunst.de

He uses glassine paper to make his lamps, which are folded, crumpled, and sculpted and have an internal fiberglass support.  They can be suspended or placed on a surface and contain a low wattage bulb.  They are available in a choice of sizes, and can be ordered from his website.


Monsieur Jacquet has used all types of paper, and thinks that every type has distinct characteristics that lend themselves to their final form.  His job is to merely help them realize that form.  Although he feels paper has a fragility to it, it can be surprisingly elastic and has great texture.  Paper has a tactile responsiveness.


A believer in the 3 Rs - reduce, reuse, recycle - he is an upcycle artist.  That is he gives old items greater value, not less, by converting them into art sculptures.  He counts the Swiss surrealist sculpture Alberto Giacometti and Senegalese artist Ousmane Sow as influences.

The big masks are made with one sheet of white or black Canson paper.
They measure roughly 12 - 16 inches in height, and can be mounted on stands.

He has worked with a wide variety of papers and creates a wide variety of sculptural styles.  One of his figurines he calls Bonhomme Canelle, a whimsical figure made of one sheet of cardboard.  This funny little creature is playful, spontaneous, and humorous.  There are different aspects of him available and he can stand upright on a wooden support or he can be sat or laid down.


What Monsieur Jacquet is perhaps most famous for is his masks, made from toilet paper rolls.  He first focuses on constructing the eyes, then the nose, mouth, and finally a facial expression.  He then mounts these masks to a flexible metal staff with a foot.  The pieces are coated with shellac and sometimes pigments.


His unique technique is still inspired by traditional origami in that he uses one sheet of paper.  But he has taken the art of paper folding a long way.  It will be interesting to see what he comes up with in the future, as he continues to express his take on paper folding.

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Images courtesy of the artist's website.
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Monday, April 11, 2011

Snippy Art


Contemporary Chinese example (for Year of the Dog) in a style that is
like the 6th century form.  Image courtesy of Fanghong/Wikipedia.

Papercutting is the art of cutting out paper designs.  Cultures all over the world have their own unique styles of the art.  No surprise that the oldest known papercut is from 6th century C.E. China, as the Chinese invented paper.  The traditional style of papercutting is Jian Zhi and red is the most commonly used color. Predominantly Chinese Zodiac animals are used.

The art is alive and apparently doing well in China.  Among the many websites dedicated to it, China Art World features some excellent artists in this medium, some whose work is shown below...

Peony Flowers by Ye Kai Yuan.

Old Bejing Scene - "Lao Beijing Bing Tang Hulu" - artist unknown.

River Dock by Gao Dian Liang.

There are also some extraordinary contemporary artists who choose to work in this medium.  One of the well-known ones is Hina Aoyama.  Born in Yokohama in 1970 she currently lives and works in Ferney Volaire, France.  She has been doing her lacy papercutting since 2000, aiming to make the finest cuts in order to replicate the look of lace...

Lyon2

carrosse-p
laForeti

Bovey Lee works with Chinese rice paper made from mulberry tree bark.  She was born in Hong Kong and currently resides and works in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She holds two MFAs - one in painting from UC Berkeley, and a more recent one in digital arts from the Pratt Institute.  She combines her knowledge of traditional and digital arts in her paper works.  She works from a digital template, using an X-acto knife to do the cutting...

Power Plant - The Capture of Pieta, 2008.

Little Crimes (detail), 2008.
Tsunami-Enmeshed, 2008.

Peter Callesen is a Danish artist who works almost exclusively with white paper. He mainly uses A4 sheets of paper, stating that it is probably the most common media for carrying information.  By stripping the information and using blank white A4 paper sheets that we all can relate to, he seeks to use its neutrality and create different meaning.  His paper sculptures (made only of paper and glue) expand into space.  An amazing and thoughtful artist, he has become very well-known...

White Hand, 2007.
Half Way Through (detail), 2006.

Distant Wish, 2006.

Down the River, 2005

Kara Walker, a California-born artist, was named one of Time Magazine's 100 Most Influential People in the World, Artists and Entertainers, in 2007.  She is best known for black cut-paper silhouettes that are room-sized.  In 1997, when she was 28, she became one of the youngest people to receive a MacArthur fellowship. Her work explores race, gender, sexuality, violence and identity.  She currently lives in New York, and is on the faculty of the MFA program at Columbia University...

Camptown Ladies
Cut, 1988

View of Walker's installation at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York,
10/11/07 - 2/3/08.  Photo courtesy of Sheldan C. Collins.

I remember doing a silhouette in grammar school and cutting it out.  My German grandfather also did some simple cut-outs to amuse me.  But I never dreamed of anything like the work above.  Thankfully we are not created equal in our talents, and some people have such a high level of creativity it takes my breath away and inspires me to use mine.  The artists featured here are a "cut above" when it comes to executing their ideas.

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Please click on the artists' links to see more of their excellent work!
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