Showing posts with label modern mosaics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modern mosaics. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2016

My first mosaic after a long hiatus: a #mosaic plate

 


It's been a while, actually round about seven years, that I haven't touched my cutting nippers, hammer and hardie. Not to mention my tesserae. The feeling was, to say the least, therapeutic, fulfilling, almost like a dream. To be honest, it feels as if I have to learn everything right from the start and, I won't hide it, my mosaic project has not turned the way I wanted it. It is way far from good (for my own standards), lots of mistakes, project, colour and design wise, but I am glad for one thing: I did it, it's finished.

Magda

Monday, June 16, 2014

Goldfinger

mosaic work by Nirit Keren - taken from Pinterest

Nirit Keren is a mosaic artist who sets out to explore the medium in a way that is bold and very personal. I will give you one good reason why she is an inspiration to me: She's not superfluous. Eloquence and minimalism is the trend I am more inclined to be inspired by. Somethings are implied, not shown (off). Modesty is good when coupled with superb craftsmanship.


Monday, February 17, 2014

girl with a pearl earring - #mosaic

image credit Jane Perkins - http://www.bluebowerbird.co.uk/info.htm

Here's one of my favourite paintings "remade" by Jane Perkins, an artist who makes mosaics using a variety of materials. What a gifted artist!

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Friday, February 7, 2014

Tesserae. By Greek #mosaic artist Olga Goulandris







Sharing some pictures from Olga Goulandris's recent mosaic art exhibition in Athens. Authentic work, fantastic textures and material blending. Also a creative way of presenting mosaics. A video is also available here (in Greek) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYPArw2swyE&feature=youtu.be

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Flying, falling or both



Your rise could induce a fall.
And your fall could be the cause of a rise.

You might be flying but you could also be falling or both.

You are wondering if this confusion is because your dreams are being dissolved into thin air before they can get the chance to become true.

But don't think about that.
Wait till the winds are not that brutal.
Or until you stop minding the winds.

You will re-emerge.

Tomorrow.

Words by Magda of Mosaicology
#Mosaic Art by Olga Goulandris (
Volcan di Pacaya 2012)

A presto!
Magda

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Saturday, September 7, 2013

She's got the look

mosaic by Pasquale Roscigno

Guys or gals, doesn't she have that look that says it all?

Indifference. Lust. Disappointment. Sadness. Intelligence. Class.... Stay out of my way.

This is a mosaic by Pasquale Roscigno, an Italian mosaic artist living in Campania.

Friday, May 24, 2013

#1 hot (mosaic) stuff


Am I loving this now.....I can almost see Aphrodite being reborn here. A spectacular mosaic tub with unglazed tiles for an antique minimal edge. A jewel. This is heaven. By artist Artist Stevie Meder for Artaic.

Friday, November 2, 2012

I got you under my skin


I am sure that this picture requires no words besides giving the image/product credit to its distinguised creator, SICIS.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Monday, October 1, 2012

Everything's coming up flowers in Bisazza's 2013 mosaic collection and Milan's Runways

image credit Bisazza
posted on Twitter by @Bisazzaofficial 28/09/2012 at 12.30

Who hasn't heard of Bisazza one of Italy's top luxury design and mosaic brands? Their vitreous mosaic tiles are famous worldwide and the brand basically needs no introduction. It's a name you will definitely encounter if you are into mosaic. Artists and customers alike.

This groovy floral 70s style pattern, from Bisazza's 2013 mosaic collection, would be normally expected to be seen in a painting, a dress, a cushion. Yet, a mosaic interpretation of this motif - is one of the many ways of saying to the world that mosaic has true potential that knows no limits. When turning motifs - usually used in other artforms - into mosaic, there's always a slight risk that you will not get that seamless result. For an established brand like Bisazza there's no such risk. This motif, in the hands of their design and mosaic artists, is transformed into an outstanding decorative panel.

The brown-blue colour combination is also worth looking at. Brown, the colour of the earth. Blue, the colour of the sky. These colours together bring a sense wholeness and tranquility. A rather "reserved" combination, a work of art like this goes everywhere and would be ideal into a corporate environment.

Apparently flowers is one of this year's trends !

Simone Rocha S/S 2013 Runway
"See" the flowers on Milan's runway?
Prada Spring 2013
More flower power
Christina Ricci wearing Valentino Resort 2013
Kerry Washington wearing J.Mendel Resort 2013
Alexander McQueen Resort 2013

See more of the 2013 mosaic collection on Bisazza's Facebook. The following image will definitely convince you to go take a look!

image credit Bisazza

Disclaimer: I don't receive money from my posts when presenting products and work of companies and artists. All I write here is based on my personal opinion and taste. If you like my style and are interested to get some writing done for your site or marketing material (invitations, white papers, newsletters), click here to find out more.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Mosaic Lady in Red

via
Wow, this is a spicy one!

I just love how the artist designed part of the shoes and hair of this sexy mosaic lady in red to appear out of the outline.

This would look great in an entrance in a single guy's apartment, don't you think?

Thursday, December 29, 2011

New (limestone) trends in mosaic art

This is my 3rd LIMESTONE post. If you haven't read the previous posts, you can first go and read The "limestone" island and then Learning mosaic the flexible way (lime putty).

All this talk about limestone can only bring to mind a cutting edge group of mosaic artists called CaCO3 (by clicking on their name you will be visiting their site).

The above mosaic is entitled Movimento n.18 and it's white limestone on mortar, 60 x 90 cm. 2011. This piece was awarded the Orsoni Award this year - € 2,000 in materials from Orsoni Veniziani for The Use of Traditional Materials. 

Read more about the awards on Mosaic Art NOW.

Notice how the tesserae have been inserted into the mortar. A completely "unorthodox" way of mosaic making which kind of takes you back to the basics, praising simplicity and the need to exploit "what we already have" while at the same time there is a clear statement of something entirely new. Minimalistic new but "rich", rich as in filled with knowledge of the materials, with passion and with love for the medium

There's more from CaCO3.


This art work is called I.M.O.8 / Organismo n.8 white limestone on mortar. 2010

I am totally addicted to their work.

Here's one more, I guess my very favourite.


A close up helps us appreciate the intensity of the work and the dynamic interaction between the tesserae. I am not surprised to see how the achievement of an outstanding minimalistic artwork conceals such discipline and originality.


I have a few more things to share that have to do with concrete and some other stuff but still need to work on my ideas and hope to be able to post something soon. In the meantime, I will be posting some interesting finds that I have been tweeting.

My warmest wishes to each one of you for the New Year!

Images link back to their source and naturally belong the mosaic artists mentioned. Text in all 3 limestone posts was written by mosaicology.blogspot and can be republished as long as the source is indicated.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Interview with Lilian Broca - Συνέντευξη με την Λίλιαν Μπρόκα

 
Queen Esther via




Queen Esther revealing her true identity  
via


While going through the interview and translating it in Greek, Maria Callas came to mind. I remembered one of her famous quotes. You are born an artist or you are not. I did not know that Lilian Broca, prize winner, accomplished mosaic artist from Canada is actually SELF TAUGHT. I did not know of a movement aiming to face and hopefully vanish prejudice against mosaic. All mosaic artists and those wishing to enter into this remarkable and highly rewarding art form, hold dearly these words into your hearts. MOSAIC IS ART. For me, it is something more than that. It is the ONLY ART FORM on which you can WALK (mosaic floors) while it is still ART. The only art form on which you can EAT (mosaic tables) while it is still art. Its perfect functionality does not and should not condition its character, integrity, value and its class. Amen to that.

Lilian Broca via
 
1. What is it that distinguishes mosaic art from other art forms?

    Unlike most other artistic disciplines, the making of glass mosaics is governed by the will of the medium. The material itself possesses an integrity that can never be subdued; whereas oil paints, acrylics, pencils, charcoal, and conte all obey the will of the artist, the artist need only think and instruct the hand to achieve the expected result. Not so with glass and mosaic: the material dictates the outcome and must be obeyed. Even with this limitation, artists can still express themselves in glass or stone and in abstract or figurative form, and create works of contemporary meaning and impact. One learns how to “think mosaic” very quickly.

    
    2. What was it that attracted you to mosaic ? How did you start ?
    
    In my 3rd year of the Concordia University BFA program I got permission from the prof. to try this unusual medium after seeing a mural in progress. Without any instruction I learned the technique by trial and error. The left over glass was carefully saved and only after 30 years or so I decided to use it in a new series on Queen Esther as the biblical story implied the palace where she lived with her husband the King of Persia, had mosaic floors. I then bought more glass and several how-to mosaic books. The rest you know from my website....
    

    3. How do you see mosaic art and mosaicists in the future ?

    In my forthcoming book The Hidden and The Revealed: The Queen Esther Mosaics of Lilian Broca  which gets released in August of 2011 by Gefen Books Publishers, I wrote about a new international movement called TE21 (Tessellated Expression 21) launched in 2008 solely to counteract mosaic’s marginalized position and promote it as a buona fide discipline of fine arts. Its prominent founders are Elaine Goodwin (England), Toyoharu Kii (Japan), Lucio Orsoni (Italy), and Dugald MacInnes (Scotland). According to a 2010 article about the group’s founding,  Elaine Goodwin had repeatedly appealed to Sir Nicholas Serota, a curator at the Tate Gallery, London, but his response had always been the same: mosaic works belong solely in the applied and decorative arts institutions, such as the Victoria and Albert Museum (also London).

    TE21 was founded specifically with the purpose of reversing such attitudes and giving established professional artists who work with mosaic, such as myself, a distinct voice and an opportunity to exhibit together. I am not a member, but I believe all mosaic artists will have a better opportunity to obtain a deserved platform within the often elitist fine arts intelligentsia. I anticipate that in the coming years less biased and more enlightened museums and art galleries will support the re-emergence of this ancient and spectacular artistic discipline and give weight to exhibitions of contemporary mosaic art.


This Interview was given exclusively to Mosaicology Blog with all rights reserved. Images credit Lilian Broca from her website. If you wish to publish this interview please contact me.

Μετάφραση στα ελληνικά

    1. Τι κάνει την τέχνη του ψηφιδωτού να ξεχωρίζει από τις άλλες μορφές τέχνης;

Σε αντίθεση με τις άλλες τέχνες, η κατασκευή ψηφιδωτών από γυαλί καθορίζεται από τις προσταγές του μέσου. Το ίδιο το υλικό διαθέτει μία ακεραιότητα που ποτέ δεν μπορεί να υποταχθεί, ενώ η ελαιογραφία, η ζωγραφική με ακρυλικά, τα μολύβια, κάρβουνα και conte crayon υπακούουν όλα στην θέληση του καλλιτέχνη, ο καλλιτέχνης χρειάζεται μόνο να σκεφθεί και να καθοδηγήσει τα χέρια για να κατορθώσει το αναμενόμενο αποτέλεσμα. Όχι όμως με το γυαλί και το ψηφιδωτό: Το υλικό υπαγορεύει το αποτέλεσμα και πρέπει να υπακούεται. Ακόμα και με δεδομένο αυτόν τον περιορισμό, οι καλλιτέχνες μπορούν κάλλιστα να εκφραστούν μέσω του γυαλιού ή πέτρας και σε αφηρημένες ή παραστατικές μορφές και να δημιουργήσουν σύγχρονα έργα με νόημα και απήχηση. Κανείς μαθαίνει να σκέφτεται με γνώμονα το ψηφιδωτόπολύ γρήγορα.


2. Τι σε τράβηξε στο ψηφιδωτό; Πως ξεκίνησες;

Στο 3ο έτος του προγράμματος BFA στο Concordia University πήρα άδεια από τον καθηγητή να δοκιμάσω αυτό το ασυνήθιστο μέσο μετά που είχα δει μία τοιχογραφία (μουράλ ψηφιδωτού) υπό κατασκευή. Χωρίς κανένα μάθημα έμαθα την τεχνική μαθαίνοντας από τα λάθη μου. Το γυαλί που έμενε το φύλαξα με προσοχή και μόνο μετά από 30 χρόνια αποφάσισα να το χρησιμοποιήσω σε μία νέα σειρά με θέμα την Βασίλισσα Εσθήρ καθόσον η ιστορία στην Βίβλο άφηνε να εννοηθεί πως το παλάτι όπου έμενε με τον σύζυγο της τον Βασιλιά της Περσίας, είχε ψηφιδωτά δάπεδα. Μετά αγόρασα περισσότερο γυαλί και διάφορα βιβλία εκμάθησης για το ψηφιδωτό. Τα υπόλοιπα τα ξέρεις από τον ιστοχώρο μου...


3. Πως βλέπεις την τέχνη του ψηφιδωτού και του ψηφιδογράφους στο μέλλον;

Στο προσεχές μου βιβλίο The Hidden and The Revealed: The Queen Esther Mosaics of Lilian Broca  που θα κυκλοφορήσει τον Αύγουστο  από τον εκδότη Gefen Books, έγραψα για μία διεθνή πρωτοβουλία που ονομάζεται TE21 (Tessellated Expression 21) που ξεκίνησε το 2008 με αποκλειστικό σκοπό να αντιδράσει για την περιθωριακή θέση που κατέχει το ψηφιδωτό και να το προωθήσει σαν ένα buona fide κλάδο των καλών τεχνών. Οι εξέχοντες ιδρυτές της κίνησης αυτής είναι Elaine Goodwin (Αγγλία), Toyoharu Kii (Ιαπωνία), Lucio Orsoni (Ιταλία), και Dugald MacInnes (Σκωτία). Σύμφωνα με ένα άρθρο του 2010 σχετικά με την ίδρυση της ομάδας, η Elaine Goodwin έχει επανηλημμένα αποταθεί στον Sir Nicholas Serota, έφορος στο μουσείο Tate Gallery Λονδίνο, αλλά η απάντηση του ήταν πάντα η ίδια: τα ψηφιδωτά έργα ανήκουν μόνο σε ιδρύματα εφαρμοσμένων και διακοσμητικών τέχνων, όπως το Victoria and Albert Museum (επίσης στο Λονδίνο.) 
Η κίνηση TE21 ιδρύθηκε ειδικά με τον σκοπό να αντιστρέψει τέτοιες νοοτροπίες και να δώσει μία αισθητή φωνή και μία ευκαιρία για την πραγματοποίηση ομαδικών εκθέσεων για καθιερωμένους καλλιτέχνες που εργάζονται με το ψηφιδωτό, όπως είμαι εγώ. Δεν είμαι μέλος, αλλά πιστεύω ότι όλοι οι ψηφιδογράφοι θα έχουν μία καλύτερη ευκαιρία να αποκτήσουν ένα επάξιο πλαίσιο εντός των συχνά ελίτ διανοουμένων κύκλων των καλών τεχνών. Αναμένω ότι στα επόμενα χρόνια λίγοτερο προκατειλημμένα και πιο διαφωτισμένα μουσεία και γκαλερύ τέχνης θα υποστηρίξουν την επανεμφάνιση αυτού του αρχαίου και καταπληκτικού καλλιτεχνικού κλάδου και ότι θα δώσουν βάρος σε εκθέσεις σύγχρονης τέχνης του ψηφιδωτού.

Η συνέντευξη αυτή δόθηκε αποκλειστικά στο Mosaicology Blog, που έχει όλα τα δικαίωματα. Οι φωτογραφίες ανήκουν στην Lilian Broca από τον ιστοχώρο της. Αν θέλετε να δημοσιεύσετε αυτήν την συνέντευξη επικοινωνήστε μαζί μου.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

The Mosaic Man, New York

I saw this breathtaking picture of Central Park in New York on LA Times today and thought..New York..one of the places I would love to visit. Look at those fascinating colours! On a whim I googled "new york mosaic" to see what happens and what do you think popped up? The Mosaic Man!!! A New Yorker who decorated lampposts with mosaic, an artist from East Village who in 2004 won a City Lore People’s Hall of Fame Award.


Here are some links for this unusual guy:

the villager 1st article

the villager 2nd article

new york daily photo blog


Last but not least, a video of the Mosaic Man...Isn't this like a fairy tale?


Mosaic Man from Sahar Sarshar on Vimeo.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Under the sphere of...mosaic influence




Mosaic spheres by artist Felice Nittolo 

Nittolo is one of my favourite contemporary mosaic artists, a trendsetter, challenging, with a strong Ravenna education/school background which you can see from his work, yet with a strong inventive edge and fresh "from scratch" creative work which appears simple to conceive but in fact would require a perfect...almost perfect mosaic master to tackle it.

And there you have new masterpieces.

I wish I could have him as a teacher.

via