ArtZipper Blog / Tips


 
Give Mom Art- Mother's Day May 13
Gift Mom with Art 

This bison brown leather bag is lightweight and perfectly sized for moms' essentials. It's small but mighty, with a hidden 2" gusset at the base to expand for extra storage. There is a hidden snap under the flap to keep her things safe and secure. Artist Sarah Green 

  SHOP PURSES NOW!  

"Island Paradise" is a refreshing aqua that calls to mind a change of scenery. A cool blue-green shade that speaks to the dream of the great escape.  These earrings are lightweight and have sterling silver wires.   Jeweler, Diana Ferguson $75

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Show mom you love her by giving her this beautiful watercolor painting. The pinks, blues, and greens will look great in any room of the house.  Watercolor Artist, Benjamin Reuter 14" X 11" $50
 

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Give Mom Art- Mother's Day May 13
Wrap her in Love with Wearable Art!

"Dusk" is made of 2-layers of black and white silk chiffon abstract floral patterns. Versatile and reversible, she can accent any work, play or everyday outfit with this timeless accessory.  The pattern from the opposite side peeks thru to reveal beauty, magic and dimension.  Artist Ann Catherine $92 70" X 18"

  SHOP SCARVES NOW!  

This shawl was inspired by a pre-World War II kimono, with stencil printed warp and weft threads. Hand-painted drawing on a medium weight silk crepe de chine.  It is seamed with three diagonal French seams, which were then hand-beaded with faceted brass colored beads on the front.  Artist Kathleen Grumich 14" X 78"

 SHOP WEARABLES NOW!  

Versatile rich jewel tone scarf that goes with so many outfits!  Super special wardrobe accessory with a feel pretty fabric that covers her arms. Created from an image the artist has made in the garden and beyond. Mom can take this scarf wherever she goes. Artist, Shelly Lawler,  $74.99.

Copyright ©  2018 ArtZipper.com, All rights reserved.
An Amdur Productions Company

Our mailing address is:
PO Box 550, Highland Park, IL 50035

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You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

 
A current trend that is building is the use of up cycled materials. We see artists using found objects, repurposing materials and riding the wave of recycling re-using materials. While one may point to the collages of well-known artists like Picasso in Bottle of Vieux Marc, Glass, Guitar and Newspaper , 1913 and  Black Wall 1959 by Louise Nevelson in which the artist assembles materials found in the street into a sculptural composition of 24 wood boxes.

Contemporary sculptor artist John Chamberlain has made art from up cycled car parts. Ilana Goor, famous Israeli sculptress, who in Wild Weeds, 2004 uses wire and found objects in this mixed media piece.

So it is with the artists of the moment. Driven by new ideas, influenced by the move to re-use, reduce, recycle and the inherent low costs of supplies, up cycled art is growing as a well accepted art form.

From the work of 2D artist Jennifer Lashbrook who creates large scale art from discarded pain chip samples to Amy Manning who uses vintage doors, moldings and hardware to create new functional pieces.  Chicago artist Andrew Christen salvages old wood floors from buildings set for demolition and used the planks as the foundation for his paintings. Heather Hambrecht uses hand selected eco-conscious leather remnants repurposed from the excess of industry for her purses, back packs and wearables. Sculptor Dakota Pratt uses thousands of bottle caps in his work, covering his understructure with the patina of pounded flat bottle caps. Kinetic Sculptor Frank Strunk, and artist Dick Cooley each create 3d work from a palette of old hardware, machines and much more.


Graffiti, long regarded as the work of malicious young people and gangs, is becoming a respected art form. From Banksy’s street art work found all over the world, to entire industries that have emerged such as the Graffiti tours in Tel Aviv, to the Wynwood Walls in Miami, graffiti is all around us. Street festival artists of today including Melissa Mastrangelo and Kenneth Kudulis reflect the graffiti trend.

While many materials are used in today’s graffiti art, the use of spray paint has been a mainstay allowing for speed in creating these pieces that typically are created under the darkness of night. Young emerging artists like Frank Gonski and Brett Whitacre have tossed the brushes and traded them in for spray paint and even digital spray paint, working from the fronts and backs of pieces creating mobile pieces of graffiti art.