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The wonderous fact is / that there are more miracles / than disasters / except to those / who have the wrong experience.
(assemblage of recycled wood, photo, board, paint, metal.
size: 105x 75x 17 cm.
more info mail artist via flickr or www.meurtant.exto.org
Sonnenhaus-Platz / Mönchengladbach / North Rhine-Westphalia / Germany
Album of Germany (the west): www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157713209...
Album of Mönchengladbach: www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157714085...
Final state? The Desert Rose print is now part of a rather large Assemblage that was inspired by the form factor of a grandfather clock. It is a little over six feet tall ( two meters) The rocks in this piece come from the same landscape of desert in the print
This image is part of another creative-explosion-of-branching-versions that always seem be given to me. It all started with these images of a rusty wall in the little town of Anacortes Washington: www.flickr.com/photos/colvinart/sets/72157601331403286/
This is how the assemblage turned out. I should point out that this was finished some eight years ago
(the symmetry is quite recent variation, just this week:
www.flickr.com/photos/colvinart/1829577678/ )
but the assemblage sold only a few weeks after I finished it. The lens on the eye is on a swivel and it can be moved aside to see both eyes.
I look at it now and would do so many things differn't, that is how it goes with art.
This temporary assemblage, no3, has withstood four seasons in my garden. I became intrigued with its aging process... dead, dried leaves, worn and rotting wood, algae and moss, tears and rips and rust...
The creative process continues as I look and see and photograph that which this assemblage art of mine has become...
See original version: www.flickr.com/photos/marybogdan/36688290/in/set-810798
An assemblage/painting that I have just finished making; utilising canvas and linen.
Acrylic on canvas, laid down on canvas. 600mm by 400mm.
This temporary assemblage, no3, has withstood four seasons in my garden. I became intrigued with its aging process... dead, dried leaves, worn and rotting wood, algae and moss, tears and rips and rust...
The creative process continues as I look and see and photograph that which this assemblage art of mine has become...
See original version: www.flickr.com/photos/marybogdan/36688290/in/set-810798
A couple of many very small "box constructions" or assemblage pieces that reside in the studio. This is one of my favorites, created by an artist pal, Les Gains.