Category Archives: Apprenticeships

dc apprenticeship audio slideshow: novie trump

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During my internship in Washington DC I spent many hours talking to each artist as I worked with them, making sure to capture snippets of our conversations to share with you.

Bird Reliquary, ceramic, poem etched in glass

Today I take you inside ceramic artist Novie Trump’s studio as she works on several reliquaries for upcoming shows.

Bird Reliquary, detail

The pictures in this post are two finished reliquaries that you will see in progress in the slideshow below. Once finished, they shipped to a group show where they sold the moment the show opened. They were among the first pieces to sell in the show.

Butterfly Reliquary, ceramic, etched glass

Trump’s haunting, meaningful work, which speaks to our need to create spaces for the things we hold dear, hasn’t been featured at a SOFA show yet but it surely belongs there.


Butterfly Reliquary, detail

Gallery owners take note, her work practically flies off the walls of FLUX Studios. Really.

Novie often uses found objects and birds in her reliquaries. Listen and watch as she refines a reliquary box in leather-hard stage while reflecting on some of her inspiration. . .

{Best Viewed In Full Screen Mode}

Please Note!

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dc apprenticeship: washington writer’s retreat

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Watch and listen as my first audio slideshow shares a glimpse of where I lived during my internship in Washington DC. Many more audio slideshows to come about the internship, so please stay tuned.

Best viewed in Full Screen mode

Anne L’Ecuyer’s Washington Writer’s Retreat was a perfect fit for me. After a long day in one of the studios or out in the city documenting the experience, it was a welcome relief to have the comforts of home keep me going as I wrote and edited images well into the night. Chloe and I stayed in the ‘A’ Room with the two sweet cats-in-residence keeping us company. . .what more could I ask for?

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shadow and light

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I’m busy organizing and editing images to share with you. Here’s one that may become part of a slideshow about the special place where I lived during my internship. More to come. . .


dc apprenticeship ends

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Yesterday we ate and laughed and talked shop and marveled at how well this internship turned out.  Here’s my tribe saying goodbye (that’s one of the things I discovered while I was here – I’ve found my tribe!).  You will read more about each of them and their work in the coming weeks once I have a chance to edit images and audio.

Michael Janis, Margaret Boozer, Tim Tate, Jessica Beels,
Laurel Lukaszewski, Ani Kasten, Erwin Timmers, Novie Trump

(missing: Rob Kincheloe – Penland trumps daMuse!)

And here’s what happened right after I took the picture above.  Can you see whey I love them?

[click on the image to see the animation}

I was supposed to drive home today, but there’s a Nor’easter heading up the I95 corridor so I think I’ll rest up and get on the road early tomorrow.  I can’t wait to share more of this incredible group of artists!

mermaids past their prime and other musings

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‘Mermaids Past Their Prime’ is one of Tim Tate’s most recent video reliquary sculptures.

Mermaids Past Their Prime
blown and cast glass, found objects, electronics, video
21 x 7 x 7

picture: Pete Duvall

Part of an 8 piece series titled “21st Century Sideshows”, the reliquary boasts a glass mermaid finial, a cast glass circus tent, the requisite crowd peeking inside the curtain to see the show, a relaxed mermaid leaning on oyster shells and a video of a mermaid past her prime smoking a cigarette and looking bored with life.

The 21st Century Sideshows series in progress

Mermaids Past Their Prime, detail (yes, that’s daMuse!)

I’m the aging mermaid in the video loop that plays continuously as viewers peer through the curtains of the circus tent. Tim’s editing genius turned my face blue, my lips green and my eyeshadow pink.  Perfect for a mermaid, don’t you think?

The video above is daMuse before Tim’s color shift.
Come by WGS to see the full effect of the final cut!

why did i do it?

Aside from the obvious reason – documenting the life of working artists today – another reason I started the apprenticeship project was that I knew it would force me to do things outside of my comfort zone (CZ). I would have to let myself be be bad at something; let myself be an uninformed beginner in front of everyone (a particularly hard one for me); let go of my perfectionist ways; live without knowing what’s next. And that’s the short, publishable list – the full list is much longer!

When Tim asked me to be the aging mermaid I knew I would have to quickly learn how to NOT take myself so seriously. My first inclination was to say no – but I chose to challenge myself instead. And this challenge, one of many here at my DC internship, meant I had to get over myself FAST.

Posting unflattering pictures of myself made up as the aging mermaid, walking into the glass studio in the garish makeup in front of four men, allowing myself to be filmed looking really awful (and smoking a cigarette – ick!), standing still and not getting embarrassed while Tim told a well-known gallerist, collectors, students and other WGS visitors that the aging mermaid in the video was me – all of that was me stepping outside of my CZ.

Everyone should step outside of their CZ at least once a week.

It grows you.

In addition – this reliquary is sure to strike a chord with women of a certain age. I am that woman of a certain age, and I believe that the best is yet to come, so I wanted to get in her skin for a moment to remind myself of who I DON’T want to be. She’s bored and jaded – seen it all, done it all.

Me? Soon to be 52, in many ways I’m just getting started. Shedding fears like fish scales, tearing off old beliefs like tight shoes (and wondering how I ever walked in those too-tight shoes), letting the possibilities wash over me like a long-awaited cleansing rain.  I am the opposite of a mermaid past her prime regardless of my chronological age. I don’t intend to EVER be past my prime, even when I am well into my 80′s.  Bored? Nope. Jaded? Never. There is still so much life to live!

Thanks Tim, for giving me one of the many opportunities here in DC to jump outside of my CZ. I had a blast and this series of sculptures is simply GRAND. Check out the whole series below.

Tim Tate’s 21st Century Sideshows

What have you done recently to step outside of your comfort zone? Please leave a comment and share it with us.