
The color turquoise reminds me of the ocean which is, of course, a fantasy:
... nereids, Triton, dolphins.... Atlantis....way down below the ocean....
For over twenty years my handmade paper shell assemblages and cards have been given titles such as Melusine's Delight, Undine's Treasure, Nereids Domain, Dancing with Eurynome. In my mind I see visions of underwater archaeology — the search for ancient sunken amphoras and other treasures or
the Bimini Road. No doubt some of this comes from a conglomeration of remembered images of The Incredible Mr. Limpet and Seahunt from childhood, with Jacques Cousteau documentaries and a wee bit of Homer a few years later!
In reality, the ocean I'm most familiar with is less exotic teal blue, or murky gray-blue on cloudy days. But turquoise is also the color of two of the most common found objects on the beach: nylon rope and beach glass. The best quality of nylon rope for my art projects is the oldest, most worn piece I can find. It makes and excellent representation of seaweed on the assemblages with the paper shells and I find other uses for it, as well. Living several hundred miles from the nearest ocean beach, I stocked up on supplies of nylon rope, driftwood, beach stones, and glass on my last summer holiday back home.
Turquoise also means verdigris, whether it's a salt and vinegar treatment on copper sheet metal or natural (I keep the 'good' —i.e. really rotten— pennies for artwork). If I can't have ancient encrusted coins and amphora shards from underwater archaeological sites, I can at least try to create patinas on things
I have at hand.
When bits and pieces of these found treasures are combined with beads, aged copper pieces and other trinkets, I have a collection of my 'comfort colors'. It's a combination I never tire of and I can think of a multitude of items to create with the elements like covers for hand bound books, art dolls and jewelry (although, no jewels are ever involved).
Which brings me to the reason for this blog post: I found a gold anchor charm on the street last week. I suspect some sort of omen or symbolism could be attached to that....
This inspiration for an ocean related project had me sorting through the 'Atlantis' treasures for a couple of things to go with the anchor — a starfish charm, a tiny sand dollar, a henk of worn nylon rope and a bead made of recycled glass. Quite a while ago I ordered some tiny glass bottles from
Papier Valise. They're big enough to fill with special secret 'stuff' but small enough to use as charms. Once filled, I ran a doubled length of silk yarn through the hole in the plastic stopper and tied it around the lip to secure it. To hang it I chose colors of silk yarn to match my favorite art photographs. There was gold, chestnut brown, and blue to represent the landscapes, charcoal and off white for the black and white photographs and of course a lovely sepia color. The strand had to have knots tied at intervals to keep it together and the knotted loose ends made a nice tassel. Lastly, I used a length of worn nylon rope to tie on the glass bead.
The anchor really does it's work just like a real one, it hooks onto everything! It's come unattached twice, 'anchored' to fabric but I found it both times. I finally secured it with double rings.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Flotsam, Jetsam and Lagan
Posted by
Elaine Kerr
at
11:56 PM
Labels: creativity, found object, found object jewellery, found object jewelry, found objects, junk jewellery, junk jewelry
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11 comments:
This is just beautiful !! Every element is perfect. I stopped by Flickr first and had to come take a look. Gorgeous presentation, too.
:-)
Shelly
yours words and images, lovely and poetic Elaine.
thank you, Ken. always good to hear from you.
Hello, Shelly! I lost my first reply to your comment and somehow never got back to try again. You are always so supportive here and on flickr. Thanks. : )
I am drooling looking at all the beautiful treasures you shared. Thank you Sweet Elaine. Love, Jamie
I love your blog!!
love your colors, textures and bits! I have been dreaming of these, thanks for sharing!
Jamie, Ophelia, La Dolce Vita – thank you for your warm comments, I appreciate them so very much. : )
So, where are you??????
Raspberry season...help me Arlee! I'm buried!
Hi Elaine -
Thanks for stopping by my blog. Very nice to hear from you. Relevancy and meaning in art - even little, casual works - are important to me, so I really appreciate your comments.
Look forward to seeing more of your creative processes and fabulous pieces soon.
Happy holidays,
Shelly
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