Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Thoughts

Been reading a book recently The EMyth Revisited - Gerger and a lot of it pertained to business but some could also apply to art and creating a business around art. It discussed the fact that each business venture had a entrepreneur (the dreamer, drive and energy) a manager (lives in the past, loves organization, order, sees problems or the worry wart) and the technician (the doer, the creative).

We probably all struggle with these same characters in our lives each and every day and in essence Gerber explains that if a decent time is not given each of these characters that in time one will dominate and destroy the business....which is the strongest personality in your life?

If each characteristic doesn't receive its own opportunity, freedom and nourishment, your business will slow and mirror your lopsidedness. You can't just create and ignore the "financial accountability" the "marketing accountability" and the "sales and administrative accountability".

What you need is order, excitement and continuous growth.
              order - disciplined schedule, tools etc. plan
              excitement - constant filling the inner well so that you stay excited and full of ideas
              continuous growth - expanding marketing, new shows, website, gallery exposure

This great advice can be applied to almost every facet of life. The work you produce should be a reflection of who we are - how we do our work becomes a mirror of how we are inside.  Work is only an idea before a person does it. But the moment a person does it, the impact of the work on the world becomes a reflection of that idea.  "You become the force that breathes life into the idea behind the work".''

This was great reading when applied to your own particular issues. Thanks for dropping in for my thoughts.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Google funny!

Have to tell a funny on Google, this past weekend I was with my daughter and grandson and my daughter came in with an inquisitive look on her face and said that my grandson had some squiggles in his diaper and she was thinking something was wrong. I am not talking a few squiggles either!

Before I could even think she said well "lets just google squiggles in diaper" on google and see what comes up....me not being as techy as she looked at her with probably doubt on my face.

Seconds later she is telling me of a woman with similar circumstances on the Internet and that it was the bananas that she had been feeding her baby that caused the squiggles...well I'll be darn if we had not been attempting to begin feeding him bananas the day before.

That just goes to show you that "google" covers all subjects even "squiggles in diapers". Thanks for enjoying a laugh together.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Kees (a commissioned piece)

This was a dog commission involving a pet that had passed away and was very loved. Kees was a Colorado Red and looked an awful lot like a dingo.

Kees
This is looking down and the wax is just sitting on a stool but it gives you the idea of where I was headed with the subject. The dog had a favorite spot in the yard that he laid in and I gave the impression of that spot and also the edge of the brick work so that it gave the patron a familiarity.



silicon in tin
  The clay was produced on a laminated board, the floor covered with paste wax done with a paint brush and I placed a round shaped piece of tin around the clay as a wall to hold the silicon. My friend (thanks Deb) laid in a sealant of glue gun along the bottom to secure the tin and keep it from leaking out the bottom. I painted the entire surface of the tin with paste wax as well. Note: this silicone is so able to pick up fine detail that as I removed the tin I realized the silicone even captured my brush strokes of the wax on the wall.

tin wall with clamp
 Always remember that anything you come in contact with the medium is going to end up with a rubber splash so be careful of your surroundings and use the release spray on anything that will come in contact with the silicon so that that does not become the case. In other words you spray the dog and sides with release even though you have painted the entire wall with paste wax. You do not want to interfere with the surface of your clay though with the wax so just use the release on it.
I have mentioned this silicone before Platsil 71-20 RTV Silicone Rubber mix 1 x 10 ratio Part A and Part B, use vinyl gloves (not latex) measure carefully down to grams for volume (can't fluctuate by 5% or more or error) used scale to weigh exact grams of each, scraped and mixed both together very thoroughly. Note: I don't know how you can do this and keep it such a perfect mix without using the gram scale (thanks Deb). You have a 30 minute window once it is combined to get it all mixed and into your tin walled off area.
mold material is white so picture difficult

After setting for a minimum of four hours the tin is removed and based upon marks left you slit the rubber to allow your original clay to escape.  On the dog I placed a crimped piece of tin as a shim between his ears (thanks for the idea of crimping it Walt) where I would know exactly where to cut the mold material.

This shows the mold after removing everything and at this time you need to decide whether or not you are going to give it more support by making a plaster mold over the silicon for support, I opted not to because of the size. To do a plaster support just move your tin frame out a bit and make your basic plaster, fiber glass mold over it and let dry. Often this keeps  your wax from moving during pour or set up and creating weak spots or cracks.