Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Some of my casting work


                                         http://artjewellerybymarianb.blogspot.com/
Thanks to a friend
                                                    

 


And some polymer Clay



And then a reverse polymer Clay check
My vision is nearly complete.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Other Lives Earrings- Ancient Egypt



http://artjewellerybymarianb.blogspot.com/

 casting in ArtClay Copper!!
 I find easier and safer to carry out when casting alone.-
These pure copper portraits have been outlined using low fire China Enamel and reflect my renewed interest in Ancient Egypt sparked by a friends visit to the Melbourne King Tutankhmun Exhibition and the wonderful books that I was gifted as a result

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Bush Maiden Brooch - if at first you don't succeed try again - Establishing Your Art Concepts can be difficult






Bush Maiden Brooch
Created as a tribute to the early Romantic painters of the 1800's (some of whom never visited NZ) who visualised New Zealand as a lush tropical paradise populated by beautiful maidens, ( and visualised/painted  men in Roman type toga's and young Maori women in bonnets with European features) But who also had early Christian ideas (and maybe fantasies) about converting the whole of New Zealand to European Christianity.
It was also a tribute to my Father's stories of The Bush Maidens who lonely Miners and Hunters might imagine populated the New Zealand Bush in the early European pioneering days.
I understand there are even earlier Maori legends of a pale skinned Fairy people who (as in European legends)sometimes lived with mortal spouses for a period of time and this may be a very interesting aspect to research.


The Bush Maiden Brooch is a combination of acid - etched Brass/ painted/fired with low fIreChina painting enamel "paint" and riveted onto a handmade (and pressed) copper brooch back.
Bush Maiden was rejected for Exhibition when first offered to its first Exhibition - but I took some advice and represented it in a different format and when presented to a  second Exhibition it was awarded a third prize


So all of you out there struggling to have your work recognised - don't give up! especially if you are really pleased with something - it may be necessary to look at your work from a different perspective (or get someone else too) occassionally but keep trying!!