برچسب: Style

  • Tiff Massey Celebrates Detroit Culture and Style in Monumental Mixed-Media Installations — Colossal

    Tiff Massey Celebrates Detroit Culture and Style in Monumental Mixed-Media Installations — Colossal


    From larger-than-life double-bobble hair bands to a wall of elaborate braids, Tiff Massey spotlights distinctive Detroit style. Trained as a metalsmith, the artist employs the power of material and scale to highlight the city’s neighborhoods and Black identity and culture.

    7 Mile + Livernois, Massey’s solo exhibition at the Detroit Institute of Arts, takes inspiration from the crossroads at the heart of the city’s Black business and fashion district, where the artist grew up. The area will soon be home to a new arts and community space that Massey is spearheading in an effort to guide and celebrate local kinship.

    large metal sculptures resembling avant garde rings, installed in a black-painted museum gallery
    “Everyday Arsenal” (2018)

    Personal adornment is central to the artist’s expression, which she channels through jewelry, sculptures, and mixed-media assemblages to underscore Black style with a focus on her hometown. “Whatupdoe” and “Everyday Arsenal,” for example, respectively transform a contemporary chain necklace and silver rings into monumental installations, creating terrains of portal-like tunnels and interlocked angles.

    The “ancestral flyness” of the artist’s parents and previous generations also provides a limitless well of inspiration. “How they adorned themselves has definitely been influential not only to how I adorn myself but also to the ideas that I have within the works,” Massey says in an interview for the DIA exhibition catalogue. “Detroiters, when we step outside, we step outside. We want people to see it. We want people to see us. And that has left a tremendous impression on me.”

    7 Mile + Livernois continues through May 11. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

    a wall installation of several oversized red ball hair ties on a black wall
    “Baby Bling” (2023)
    a museum installation of large cubic metal frames interlocked in a giant jumble, inside of a room painted black
    “Whatupdoe” (2024)
    a detail of an art installation of numerous green wigs in a variety of braided styles on a black wall
    Detail of “I’ve Got Bundles and I Got Flewed Out (Green)”





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  • How to find your unique art style – Veronica Winters Painting


    How to find your unique art style


    The artist’s style defines the creator in the eyes of art collectors, curators, artists and any art enthusiasts. The artist’s name becomes the brand name. In this episode, I share my thoughts on happiness, creativity and how to find your unique voice or art style. These are my ideas that you can explore further in your art and life.

    Video https://youtu.be/5YejRjRYLEQ

    You can read the essays here: https://veronicasart.com/can-you-just-do-on-artistic-inspiration-self-doubt-and-work/

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YejRjRYLEQ

    Subscribe & rate this podcast on Spotify and Apple | Show your support for the podcast: here | Host: Veronica Winters, MFA | veronicasart.com



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  • Chasing The Style and The Skills Will Follow | Rachael Sewell

    Chasing The Style and The Skills Will Follow | Rachael Sewell


    Rachael Sewell | Episode 1099

    Rachael Sewell is a ceramic artist and candle maker based near Bristol, in the South West of England. After graduating in 2020 with a degree in Buying and Merchandising, Rachael combined her business acumen with her creative passions, launching a line of sculptural candles in 2021. Driven by a desire to explore new mediums, Rachael soon discovered her love for pottery during an intensive course, which ignited her current practice in ceramics. Rachael’s work is a playful yet thoughtful exploration of artistry and everyday utility.

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    Do you start from the premise that all things are learnable?

    Yes, I do think that, especially with me I learn best on the job and I make so many mistakes behind the scenes. People don’t see but I have made so many mistakes, especially with ceramics it is so easy to put something in the kiln and it comes out just completely gone wrong. I put a lot of time in and it is a lot of trial and error.

    About your style and color palette. Do you try and make sure your colors fit together?

    I think that is part of it, absolutely. That could be part of your style if you stick to one color palette it is just easier in that sense and make things look cohesive. But I do think it is important to take inspiration from things that inspire you. So that your work reflects you.

    Do you have a Pinterest that you keep track of, do you have bookmarks? Tell me how you keep track of the things that are inspiration for you.

    Yeah, absolutely. I am not against Pinterest, I do look on there. I take inspiration from all sources. I take inspiration from other artists. I take inspiration mainly from the world around me and what makes me feel the most impacted. And with that it’s different architectural forms and I just try to translate that into my work.

    How do you get feedback from trusted people?

    What do you mean by that? You mean my customers?

    I mean before you put it out in the world. Or is it just an internal thing that is self initiated?

    I think if I am going to be quite honest, whenever I have made work to try and please other people it’s actually been my worst pieces. So I actually always say make stuff that you like and just trust that people will find you. As an artist that is the way I like to think.

    Does the style of your presentation matter also?

    As in the image of my brand?

    Yes. 

    I actually just try and keep it quite minimal and quite clean. I think it does matter. I try to keep it as professional looking as possible. When I started I wasn’t very good at photography but I have definitely learned that along the way.

    What has got you excited and what has got you challenged in the studio?

    Excited to make bigger and more intricate lamps. And challenged to keep getting on the wheel because I don’t go on that enough and I would like to continue to get better at that.

    Book

    The War of Art by Steven Pressfield

    Contact

    araybyrach.com

    Instagram: @araybyrach





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