View allAll Photos Tagged foundobjectart
Footboard from a crib, roofing tin, shoe tongue ears, paint can lid nose, rope tail, plastic flower eyes and distributor cap udder.
Lapsarian is from the latin word lapare: to slip, to fall, to stumble. We get our english word "lapse" from that word too. Lapsarian is defined: of or pertaining to the fall of man from innocence, and to the role of women in that fall.
In the book of Genesis, the first book of the Jewish and Christian Bibles, God creates Adam and Eve and places them in the Garden of Eden, forbidding them to eat fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil (often symbolized in art and literature as an apple tree).
The serpent persuades Eve to eat fruit from the forbidden tree. Eve shares the fruit with Adam and they become ashamed of their nakedness, making coverings for themselves with fig leaves.
Later God provided garments for them of animal hides. Because of their disobedience, they were banished from the Garden of Eden, to work the ground from which Adam had been taken & made.
This assemblage piece is an attempt to visualize that story, sort of in a Tim Burton-ish way. It shows the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (shown here as an apple with teeth), with a serpent (a snake) winding in and out of it.
Eve's hand comes from inside holding an apple core. Adam, below, also has an apple core behind him, and is shown clothed with fig leaves and an animal hide (turtle shell).
Birthday Parties for kids!
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
Norman wasn't expecting to meet a wookie. Was there a protocol for this type of thing? He thought he better surrender, just in case.
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
Embroidery on repurposed ice cream container lid, seed beads, framed in black shadowbox frame, 12" x 9.5" x 2.5", 2024.Design based on asphalt road cracks
see full view: www.flickr.com/photos/dembicer/53560849932
This little tanker truck is made from a gum tin, wood, checkers, thumbtacks and wire. Stamped into the metal side of the truck is 'lots-O-love'. the back door opens!
Barbara Gilhooly
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
Waxed linen, novelty yarns, beads, metal, chains and jewelry findings on recycled drum head. 13.5" diameter. Macramé knotting, wrapping, gourd stitch beadwork, crochet on found object. 2024. Professionally framed in silver edged shadowbox with UV glass, 18" x 18".
see detail: www.flickr.com/photos/dembicer/53806953660
I love creating found object doodles and post them on Instagram, "Found Object Art" gallery on Flickr, Pinterest, Tumblr and in my Found Object Art portfolio.
a pair of angel wings I made by cutting out a feather looking area of a photo of white packing tissue.
My friend Carolyn found this mini baseball bat which worked perfectly for the fuselage. the landing gear are rusty casters, the wings are a found metal angle bracket and some drift wood from lake superior.
Barbara Gilhooly
You never know what will come out of a broken crayon (#17 in a series).
This is a quickie broken crayon doodle I did to try out Instagram Stories; you can see how I created this doodle in my Instagram Story today (if you follow me on Instagram, just look for my user icon circle at the top of your mobile device in the Instagram app) - it's up for the next 24 hours. www.instagram.com/inkygirl/
This is the only one of my Broken Crayon doodles so far created without any digital component. I usually opt for the latter because it enables me to get up super-close to the crayon (with a macro lens). I also find that a lot of manual drawing with a physical crayon tends to aggravate my tendinitis; it's the main reason I started experimenting with digital drawing years ago - I find drawing on a Wacom tablet is much easier on my tendons.
More broken crayons: debbieohi.com/brokencrayon
On Padlet: padlet.com/debbieohi/brokencrayon
and my Summer "Look Again" Challenge for young artists and writers starts on July 1st! See DebbieOhi.com/LookAgain
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
www.creativelywildartstudio.com
DUMBO, Brooklyn NY 11201
T. 646-469-7498
DM Wilding
Artist, Founder & Director
Beads, baubles, sequins and stone embroidered onto lacy stiff stuff adhered to natural wood slice, 3" high, 6" diameter, 2023.
see view 2: www.flickr.com/photos/dembicer/53290521835