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Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Sunday, April 13, 2014

tell the story

tell the story

i'm gonna leave this here for a minute and come back to it later.
it's an important thought and i don't want to lose it, (again).
my apologies for the bad image.  i'll have to borrow the book again.

ok, i'm back ... below is my attempt at on observation on the letter above:

so kurt vonnegut is one of my favorites.  like my father, he was caught up in world war II and made the best of it.  in kurt's case, you might say he made a career of it, and i go back to his books from time to time for his insightful writing and sense of humor.  i recently read the book of his collected letters, and while some are mundane, others are brilliant and totally make me stop and think .. the one above is a good one. click it to enlarge it an hopefully read it ... others are below at the end of this post.

what to make of the letter above.  hmmm  ..  i am a member of the the guild of vermont furniture makers, a group with 30 or so members throughout the state.  .. kate pace owns and runs a company called 'route 7 social' that is engaged in helping small businesses like ours market their products.  the guild recently received some state money in a grant designed to increase business activity and job creation, and we engaged her services to use social media to help us do that.   after imploring, (without much success), the list of suspects to add content to our guild of vermont furniture makers blog  , she has more or less taken over the production, (writing), and promotion of that web address.  in that effort she is visiting and profiling all thirty artists in their studios.   i had an interesting conversation with her on thursday, when it was our turn.   one of her observations from visits with other makers are that many of them describe themselves as 'not into self promotion', and 'want to let their work speak for itself'.  that's all well and good, and i understand completely.  but often, objects themselves don't have all that much to say and just sit there quietly, waiting to be 'discovered' ...  as kurt points out, "people capable of loving some paintings or etchings or whatever can rarely do this without knowing something about the artist."  so without the story, as kurt suggests above, 'there goes the ballgame right there'.  i agree that the object is only one half of the conversation.   i'm often curious why i write what i write and why i actually enjoy and look forward to doing it, and have come to the not unsurprising conclusion that, while it is not for everyone, i have a story to tell about the stuff we make, and sharing that story gives me some sense that what i am doing has an audience and is part of a dialog.  so, my humble advice to other artists is to 'tell your story'.  there's nothing more deflating in my experience than to drop off a piece, have the client say here's your check, thank you, see you later..  there's more to the ballgame than that.

think briefly about the 'famous funriture makers' .. krenov, wendel castle, nakashima, garry knox bennet ... while their work 'spoke for itself', they all spoke up for it too ... picasso, jasper johns, ai weiwei, story tellers all ..

some more of kurt's letters .. click the photos to enlarge them ..
 'we may end up miles from here' .. love it

one of the more poignant ones above, on the draft ...
and, on quitting smoking ...
and, last nut not leasgt

one of kate's photos from her visit thursday .. good one!

Saturday, March 29, 2014

100 Words For Snow

100 Words For Snow

update 2/21/14 .. saw a good 'snow slide' at a friends house .. best one ever
 this hanger was at least 3-4 feet long
 
 and about 20' wide  ... fantastic!
a real old fashioned winter, this one... 
2/26/09 ...original post below

They say the Eskimos have a hundred different words for snow .... I think we've had about 50 of em this year so far .... Here are two from this week .... 'slidycrawly'

This is my garage roof this morning at about 7:30 .... The snow is hanging down about 2 feet and is about 3" thick ....

You can see it better if you blow it up
And this was Monday morning I think , ... 'sticky'

The robin was sitting here about 3 weeks ago

Thursday, June 27, 2013

a woodworker does pottery

a woodworker does pottery

what you are going to see in this blog post is a smallish dan mosheim pottery show.  i have been fooling around with clay for about 10 years now, and have taken classes with nick seidner of rising meadow pottery, kate geotz of hartsboro pottery in wallingford, vermont and lauren silver, the pottery teacher at burr and burton academy in manchester.  i learned a little from all of them, but mostly from fooling around on my own over the years. 
 my new thing is a combination i dreamed up of slab pottery and wheel thrown pottery mixed together.  it's sort of how you might approach larger pieces if you were a woodworker and couldn't get it together to throw anything larger than about 6" in diameter and 4" tall ... i explain it all at the end of this post, but in the meantime, below are some of the highlights from the service for 12 i'm working on for our own house.  i'm about 2/3rds through ... i need just a few more soup bowls, about 8 bread and butter plates and a few larger serving pieces and platters.  click the photos to enlarge them ...



 a stack i picked up at the dorset chamber of commerce meeting tonight.  my friend janno gay, of flower  brook pottery fires my stuff for me. she recently finished 8 pieces and knew i would be at the meeting tonight.  it was a great, christmas like, surprise the way she had each one wrapped up separately.
 these two and the red and black one at the top of the post are 7" bread and butter plates

 some 9" soup bowls.. hot ones

and after about 10 items, i realized i was actually doing a version of jasper johns 'target' series.  after a little web searching i learned that the technical term is 'color field painting' and there were a bunch of those folks including johns, albers, helen frankenthaler, barnett newman, ellsworth kelly, ken noland, and others too numerous to mention.  there are a couple of examples of their paintings at the very end of the post.  it's always nice to be part of a 'movement'.
 and a 10.5" dinner plate
my collection of new and old stuff at open studio this year

ok, here's the secret.  i cheat.  i made a collection of mdf forms on my lathe that you can see in the picture below.  rough them out on the bandsaw and turn them close to the same, freehand, on my lathe.
then i roll out a .22" thick slab and drape it over the upside down form, trim it to the edge of the form and center it on the wheel using the pins and holes i drill in the bottom of the form.  next i compress it tight to the form by hand and throw a little rolled out 'snake' foot onto the bottom of the slab on the wheel.  you can see the end of that process below.
after they dry two or three days under plastic, i trim them very quickly and loosely on the wheel and color the bottoms with duncan cover coat.  love the colors they have.

my stack of plate forms


then, after struggling for a week or two, i turned the thing above with pin holes and i can center the plate or bowl right side up in the recess, and add the color to the top.  after they dry for a week or so, it's off to janno for a bisque fire, and then a clear glaze fire.  i'm looking for my own small kiln, so if anyone knows of one for sale, please let me know. 
fun, peaceful, quiet, not too expensive, functional, lovin it ...
 johns .. target with plaster casts
ken noland, a 'local guy', who taught at bennington college, 'beginning'

Saturday, May 18, 2013

i'm back (sort of) ... spring in vermont

i'm back (sort of) ... spring in vermont

well, when it's springtime in vermont, you can't expect tooooo  much writing from me ... i do have a couple of good posts coming up, but i haven't quite gotten around to getting them together just yet.  soon, i suspect, like maybe tomorrow.  maybe.  if it rains or something.  maybe ... here's a sampler of what it's like outside here now ... like i said.  spring.  click the pictures to enlarge them ...
 you got your grass to mow ... nice change from the snow ...
 you got your hoseshoes to set up
 you got your magnolias ..
 and your phoebe nest ...
 and your fishin'...  sam with a big one from the mettawee ..
 your tulips  ...
and your wood to stack ... all done now ..
your big fat 800+ page book to read ... 400 years of natural history, well written.
your golf to play ... been out a bunch of times ... 
and so much more.
and oh yeah,  we still have to work ... we've been working on the new designs.  heading into it big time on monday ... more soon ... dan

Saturday, March 16, 2013

almost thinking about spring

almost thinking about spring

 ok, at least we're starting to think about spring here ... the ducks came back to the pond on thursday, but after a cold but sunny friday, it snowed again last night, and it's in the 20's again today.  the ducks are frozen out of the pond until it warms up again.  it's pleasant today, but not like wednesday, when it hit almost 50 and the sky was that incredible blue.  springtime in vermont is something of a tease.  back and forth, forth and back, and on and on for a few weeks.  we should have crocuses in a week or two, but you'd never know it today.  click the photos to enlarge them ...





we've had daffodils from the store on the counter for a couple weeks and they are always welcome.
 but the back yard and the mountains are looking like winter still
 and then you've got the 'black and white' days like this one last week, where the only color in the picture is the stop sign ...
no color at all here
 but the barred owls are calling ... nesting time for them soon , and even though the pheobes won't be back for a few weeks,we cleared their  nest off the cornice return this week ... 
 yeah, it's as soft as it looks ... a work of natural art weaving for sure
there's wood to stack.  i'm outta here ...