Tag Archive: automata

lucker and wood’s mechanical pictures

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In 1987, armed with degrees in sculpture and printmaking from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, Ann Wood and Dean Lucker began creating mechanical sculptures that require the viewer’s participation to bring the art to life. Lucker and Wood’s Mechanical Pictures and Dexterity Games are a sheer delight for the perpetually curious. Art that moves – that engages me in the process – is infinitely appealing.

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lucker_youareamazing

You Are Amazing, 7.5″ x 6″ x 1″,
archival paper and ink, wooden back, plexiglass front and printed paper sides

[When the lever is pressed down, the young lady places a card on top of the stack of cards and the message "You Are Amazing" is revealed]

lucker_catchingthemoon

Catching The Moon

[This piece is about a tender acknowledgment of the larger cycles we all live in. When the lever is lifted up, the moon drops down as the woman's arm lifts to greet the moon]

In addition to their collaborative work, the website showcases their individual art, which is equally impressive. Wood works with the unlikely combination of dyed eggshells and seed beads to create her paintings, and Lucker carves his figures from wood and resin, adding electrical motors to the mix to create blooming flowers, spinning fortune wheels and automated figures.

lucker_leakingmoon

Leaking Moon, 40″ x 12″ x 10″

lucker_ann_swanballoon

Swan and Balloon, 34″ x 34″ x 2″, egg shells, seed beads

During the past five years, I have created dense surfaces made of dyed, cracked egg shells and seed beads hand set with surgical tweezers.  It is my intention to make beautiful, personal images which describe a powerful spirit in a mysterious manner.  By jumping through time and choosing figures of differing ages, I hope to make a physiological imprint of my life’s story. Ann Wood

This short clip shows one of Lucker’s sculptures in action. I turned the sound off when I watched it – the mechanics were noisy – the only shortcoming to this interesting body of work.

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carmen lozar celebrates the dark and light of everday life

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Sometimes you have to be in just the right frame of mind to fully appreciate an artist’s work. That was the case for me this morning as I glanced through flameworker Carmen Lozar’s portfolio of work.  Lozar celebrates the small moments of every day life with glass vignettes that are executed with a precision that allows her innate talent to emerge.

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carmen_menagerie

Menagerie, flameworked glass, mixed media. Largest animal 3.25”H x 5.25”W x 5”D

Her collection includes sculptures that honor sweet moments such as savoring the last summer tomato or relaxing in the luxury of a simple bath, but it was studying the pieces in her collection that address the darker moments in our lives that brought me to tears.

carmen_mend

Mend, flameworked glass, mixed media 9” h x 4” w x 4” d

Lozar has created a menagerie of imperfectly mended wounded animals that speaks to our human inability to fix things completely – things that we try to make better in irrational ways even though we know they can’t be fixed. The collection of diminutive sculptures (the largest is only 3.25″  tall) includes an elephant with a rubber hose trunk, a stork with a peg-leg, a rabbit with a wooden ear and other beloved animals with missing parts and pieces that can never truly be restored.

carmen_dance1

Dance Til Dawn, flameworked glass, mixed media, 13″h x 6″w x 6″d

Armed with a Master of Fine Arts degree from Alfred University and a continued exploration of art in China, Indonesia, Thailand and India, Lozar fearlessly mixes media and adds mechanical mechanisms to many of her pieces.  Animating the sculptures with automata adds an element of surprise and delight to the work. When you turn the crank on Pollination, shown below, a bee buzzes up and down the blanket that covers the loving couple.  Sweet.

carmen_pollination

Pollination, slumped and flameworked glass, 7″H x 10″W x 6″D

Carmen Lozar is only in her early thirties, yet she is able to remind us of our human vulnerability, speaking a language we can all relate to with a grace, humor and level of skill that is usually achieved only through living and working several decades. In this podcast the artist shares her thoughts and talks about her process and this 2008 article reveals even more.

Thanks to Paul Stankard for sharing this artist’s work with us and brightening a dark, rainy day.
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keith newstead: top-notch automata

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Automata artist Keith Newstead’s step by step record of his first Steampunk Automata is now a book, available on blurb here. I love this – both the automata and the idea of self-publishing a book!

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newstead_steampunk

Keith Newstead’s Steampunk Automata

 

newstead_book

A Steampunk Romance

The video below shows the automata in motion and gives you a good sense of this man’s genius. Click this You Tube link to see two dozen video clips of Newstead’s other automata.

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