Nature Undermines Manmade

4550598629_7685782db6I was hoping to find a piece as crowded with random repeated elements as we’ve had the last two days, but without the obvious organic element to see how that affects the design. However, that has been rather hard to find. Once the repetition is applied in random order, any man-made, machined or polished characteristics of the elements start to lose their innate sense of precision and inanimate nature. It would seem that the randomness itself speaks to us of nature. Then I found this piece by Katy Schmitt that is shiny, polished and bright, but the crowded design actually has some order to it. Yet, it still has a subtle, but definite organic nature to it. Why is that?

Well, there are a couple glaring things here. One, the overlapping application is reminiscent of natural things like scales and pine cones. And the colors and circling design of the canes are basically peacock feather eyes. Nature, of course, has it’s own orderly design that we also gravitate to. Repeated, crowded and yet, orderly; however, not perfect as in machined, but perfectly natural.

Orderly and natural combined elements dominant Katy’s work. Enjoy more of her work on her Flickr photostream and her own website.

 

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Sage

1 Comment

  1. Carole Monahan on August 13, 2014 at 12:19 pm

    I’m ALWAYS drawn to this beautiful color combination. Katy’s pieces remind me of organic glam!



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