Civi Group Option Value ID: 
857

Artist: Jander Fonseca de Lacerda (authored by Jander)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Jander Fonseca de Lacerda
Artist Statement: 

I'm interested in combining different materials and elements to create or change an image, to elevate it or diminish its glow and power. In this work, I am exploring the myth of celebrity and beauty, of what is classic or sacred, I use photographs by Annie Leibovitz, classic paintings by Da Vinci or Lautrec, cut out pages of W or Vanity Fair magazines, old record covers, or poetry books as my essential elements of expression. I see their beauty and power, and I want to reinterpret, to enhance, or metamorphosize these powerful images.

Artist: Sawyer Rose (authored by sawyerrose)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Sawyer Rose
Artist Statement: 
The plants and animals of the West are a treasure trove of subjects for my work. From the Mojave to the Sierras to the Mediterranean climate of the Bay Area, our native species offer a diverse mosaic of breathtaking beauty. My boldly colored, textured, three-dimensional wall sculptures explore the outrageously brash forms of wild California.
 
In my metalwork wall sculptures I use the soldering iron as a paintbrush, allowing the hot solder to set into a textured pattern that looks like tree bark. Then I add more dimension to the metal by strategically placing beads of solder to create depth and contrast. The whole piece is covered with a rich black patina, and burnished with steel wool to bring out shining highlights on the raised peaks, while leaving dark in the valleys. Finally, I abrade the painted panels with steel wool to let multiple layers of underpaint peek through.
 
I use the same soldering techniques in my lightboxes, but I overlay the work with thick, clear architectural glass, rich with bubbles and streaks. I use stained-glass techniques in my lightboxes, but I don’t use stained glass. As much as possible, I want everything to be made by my own hand. I paint the images with India ink on layers of specially treated Mylar, and stack them behind the glass, giving an illusion of depth. Flip the switch, and tiny lights behind the glass shine like fireflies or stars across the big, bold California sky.
 
With so many of California’s unique natives on the endangered species list, my work also serves as a reminder for us to protect the grandeur that surrounds us. With this in mind, I donate a portion of the proceeds from sales to the California Native Plant Society.

Artist: David Patchen (authored by davidpatchen)

Mediums: 
Styles: 
Artist Display Name: 
David Patchen
Artist Statement: 

Artist Statement I find glass as seductive as it is challenging. As a particularly unforgiving medium, an artist has endless creative opportunities to design for its unique properties--the only limitations are their imagination and skill in working with the material. I've always been captivated by how one can use this enigmatic material to achieve virtually any form, hold elements in suspension, and achieve great detail or soft abstraction. Its flexibility as a medium is matched by the difficulty it presents in using it to execute precise work. My current work is an intensive exploration of patterns, colors and transparency created through multi-layered cane and murrine (colored rods and patterned cross-sections of glass). While varied in composition and design, I most often create work within a series of graceful forms that I consider three dimensional canvases. The diversity in my compositions reflects my desire to constantly experiment and explore a variety of ideas simultaneously. Some themes in my work include windows into or through a piece, things hidden & revealed and extreme detail. Colors in contrasting and/or complimentary tertiary tones woven into complex patterns challenge expectations of the amount of detail glass can carry and its place in the art world. My influences include textiles, ethnically distinct colors and shapes as well as the marine environment. Creating my work begins with meticulous planning and designing of colors and patterns. After I pull the cane and murrine, I carefully compose these elements to design the final work, all days prior to blowing it. I enjoy this process of thoughtful creativity and the contrasting intensity of executing work in the hotshop, where the limited window to shape molten glass requires precision and urgency. The dual challenge of designing and executing complex work satisfies both the artist and the craftsman in me and I continually find it exciting to create a piece I've poured days over, watching it come to life in the fire. Bloom Recently I've been exploring a range of sculptural ideas which have evolved into a new body of work titled Bloom. Over the years I have experimented with the concept of precious things hidden and revealed and only recently found an expression for these ideas. Bloom are organic forms that reveal something unexpected and precious that reward close inquiry. Bloom are natural but non-representational and intentionally somewhat curious and hard to place. Since human brains are pattern matching machines ("oh, that looks like x"), I wanted Bloom to feel vaguely familiar but lack a single point of reference leaving it to the viewer to consider what it could be, how it evolved, what inspired it, what it communicates and what it could mean. Bloom are all one-of-a-kind works that vary in color, texture, interior pattern and overall form, but they are all of one 'species.'

Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Pages