The Party is in Full Swing. Come join us!

 

What party is this? The latest project from little ol’ me, Sage. The Sage Arts podcast is more than up and running… I have 25 episodes up as of this posting, ready on your favorite podcast player (New to Podcasts? Click here to find out how easy it is to enjoy them!) and a new one coming out every week.

 

What’s This Podcast All About?

This podcast is all about feeding and exciting your muse. By enlightening or reminding you about important and maybe unconsidered aspects of creating and living as an artist, I hope to help you find more joy and satisfaction in what you do, sharing ways to create with authenticity and fearlessness, while supporting your uniquely defined version of success.

Now what the heck does that all mean? Well, let’s look at what this is and what this is not…

 

It IS…

… a way to consistently feed your muse

… all about you. Myself, my guests, and my guest co-hosts speak to the issues, curiousity, and hurdles that you as a creative deal with on a regular basis.

… focused on creating a more fulfilling, joyful, and meaningful artistic journey.

… a conversation that goes both ways with lots of opportunities for you to be heard.

 

It is NOT…

… all about polymer clay or any one medium, as it’s important stuff for all artistic folks.

… focused on “how-to” or the latest tools and materials.

… just interviewing successful artists and talking at you. Rather it is like a coffee house chat or other friendly gather and I include you, the listener, in every way I can.

 

I created this podcast to supercharge your creativity, motivation, and artistic style through novelty, story, conversation, and community. Everyone has how-tos and ways to increase your sales – valiant and necessary stuff, of course! But what does your muse need? What does your work and your love of your art need to thrive? That’s where I want to help.

I aim to give artists ways to further hone their unique voice, increase their joy and productivity, and create a version of artistic success that is meaningful, satisfying, and anything but ordinary.

 

Come Join the Conversation

If you have something to share, would like to be a guest (for a chatty interview), or be a guest co-host (you and I banter on a particular subject) drop me an email me via my contact page on the show website: https://thesagearts.com/contact/ or send a voice mail (use the red button on that same site, bottom right corner of any page.)

And join me on social media!

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thesageartspodcast/

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/TheSageArtsPodcast

And don’t forget to click “FOLLOW” or that little arrow on your favorite Podcast player so you get notices of new episodes. New Episodes come out weekly on Friday evenings, barring natural disasters or other bits of interference, of course.  I hope you’ll join me there, on The Sage Arts podcast!

There are new artists and creatives joining every day with tons of great things to say…

 

“Just what I needed!” 

“I just binged-listened … and I can’t wait for more!” 

“There is so much validity in your presentation…” 

“Looking forward to all the thinking and creating that they prompt.” 

 

 

Taste test on my RSS website: https://rss.com/podcasts/thesagearts/

Or on the podcast home website: https://thesagearts.com/

Or start with this episode:

Mesmerizing Movement

June 18, 2013

Visual movement usually consists of some kind of directional lines. These lines don’t have to be straight. They don’t have to all be the same. They don’t even have to be repeated. But what they do need is to be emphasized in some manner that makes the viewer focus in on them.

Swirls as well as lines that meet at a point are very strong components for creating visual movement because they highlight a single point of focus where the swirl ends or the lines meet.  In other words, the line draws your view, making your gaze ‘move’ across the piece to those single points. And your eyes will keep wanting to do that. This is where the sense of movement comes from. You can see both these in Keila Hernandez‘s beautiful Plum Blossom necklace. 

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In Keila’s flowers, the points of focus are in the middle where the lines of the caning bring us. These centered focal points give us reassuring positions of stability, but the swirls on the outside keep pulling the eye back out and actually create repeated points of tension where the paired swirls meet. It makes the flowers feel very lively.

Repetition is another way to increase the visual effect of lines suggesting movement.  One flower would still give a sense of movement because of the lines used, but seeing this effect repeated across the necklace compounds it. Do you get a sense the flowers are almost swirling themselves?

If you are interested in the effect of line on the sense of movement, be sure to read last year’s Fall issue articles on Rhythm and Repetition.

A Giveaway and Introduction to Movement This Week

This week I want to focus on the idea of movement in your artwork. Movement can be either a kinetic design (having parts that move as an integral part of the design), or a visual sense of movement. But before we move onto that, I’ve got a new little feature for you all.

Nearly every day I get an email, a card in the mail, pingbacks/notices or a comment on the blog with tips, ideas, thank yous for the blog and the magazine, as well as people who are just out promoting The Polymer Arts projects of their own accord. It’s hard to convey just how heart-warming and encouraging these notes and notices are to me, knowing that readers are taking time out of their busy lives to direct me to new information, help promote what we do here or just to let me know that TPA is making a difference.  So I have this idea. Although I won’t be able to acknowledge everyone, I’d like to take time on at least one blog a week to bring these helpful and enthusiastic readers to your attention. It would be my way of saying thanks as well as helping show all you readers just how supportive this community can be. I hope seeing this will encourage you all to to reach out and add to that support or take advantage of it when you need help and encouragement.

This week, I want to give away four back issues (winner chooses any four in print, or digital if preferred) to one of our enthusiastic readers. I’ll draw a name from the folks who help spread the word about our latest issue, Summer 2013’s Mixing it Up, and the flipbook sampler that is now up on the website. This little flipbook has sample pages from the latest issue for those who haven’t decided to get their own copy yet. If you have a guild member site, a Facebook page, Twitter account, Pinterest board, or blog that you know polymer people watch, I’d be ever so grateful if you’d share this fun little teaser. There are several other flipbook sampler issues available on the same page on The Polymer Arts website. Just post this share-able link, www.thepolymerarts.com/SampleIssues.html, and/or right click and “save image” using the image below.

flipbook

 

To get in on the drawing for the four back issues, email me or post a comment to this blog post with a link to where you posted the information. You’ll be helping encourage other aspiring polymer artists, as well as giving yourself a chance to gain any issues you might be missing in your collection. On Sunday, I’ll share some of these links and reveal the winning reader for the giveaway!

Be sure to check in tomorrow; we will investigate movement in polymer art for the rest of the week. We have some really beautiful and unusual pieces to share and hopefully inspire you with!

Speaking to Your Audience

June 16, 2013

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Today, a brief quote from Degas emphasizing that art is communication. Consider what it is that people will see in your work. Yes, it is important that you like what you do; but if you plan to put it out there either to sell or display, you need to consider what it is that it ‘says’ to the buyer and viewer. You have the chance to be heard. Make the most of it.

Mixing Beauty

June 15, 2013

The only thing we really didn’t hit this week while talking about sculpture is how it can be such a wonderful type of work for mixing media. Sure, adding props, embellishments, and clothing is pretty common with polymer figure sculpture, but it doesn’t have to end there. How about mixing two-dimensional art with three-dimensional objects?

Renata Jansen creates these ethereal figures that come across as both alive and yet painterly. In fact, she calls her work “3D paintings in clay”. In her piece “Ava” you see here, it is rather hard to tell where the sculpture ends and the painting (which is both on her body and on the background piece) begins.

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The way the two mediums meld together is just beautiful. There’s not much more to say about it other than this just being another example of how well polymer can work with other mediums.

You can see multiple views of this piece and others on Renata’s website.

Outside Inspiration: Embellishing the Figure

June 14, 2013

If you are looking for  inspiration for your own sculptures or to expand what you are doing with other forms, do look outside polymer into the other malleable materials that allow for such wondrous pieces as this full size head and torso by Linda Ganstrom. This is actually made from paper clay cast in a body mold; the decorations are mold-made forms and paints.
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What strikes me most about this piece is the use of motifs to decorate and add to the human form so that the torso and head act as a base for the symbolic imagery, as well as making a direct connection to the human experience. And I like that the human form is directly ‘decorated’, something more often relegated to the stand or props that might accompany it. Why not use the canvas of the body’s form to further express your ideas? Yes, sculpting the form can be and often is very expressive all on its own, but if you have a little more to add, additional forms, drawings, textures, and the like are not off limits. It’s art. Few things are off limits.  

 

Emotive Expressions

June 13, 2013

There is one element particular to sculpture that isn’t directly translatable to other work, unless you are going to add some form of sculpture to your jewelry or decor: the creation of emotion through facial expressions.

With non-representational art (which constitutes the majority of wearable and functional art) we can use colors, forms, patterns, textures, and motifs to help us express emotion, but a viewer’s life experiences and associations will determine if they draw that same emotion from the work. However, joy, pain, confusion, sadness, apathy, and other human reactions can be rendered in sculpture through faces. Human facial expressions are, more or less, universally understood, giving the sculptural artist who recreates the human form or brings to life personified creatures or objects quite the advantage in terms of relaying emotion–which in turn can relay atmosphere or may even help tell an entire story.

Joyce Cloutman has some of the most wonderful expressions on her polymer dolls and figures. Mirth and contentment seem to be dominant on her whimsical people and creatures, consistent with the fun sense of humor she obviously has.  I mean, these little guys are call Snail Males. They’re just adorable.

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If you have never tried sculpting faces, oh what fun awaits you–because of course, you have to try it! I’ve found it’s usually best to just play around and try not to aim for realism when you start out. Exaggerated lips, cheeks, head shape, eyes, and noses can really help you loosen up preconceptions about the shape, size, and orientation of features on a face.

To start your face play, you can work off someone else’s work that is already exaggerated like Joyce’s sculptures (you can see more on her Flickr page). You can also look through some of the many online tutorials, such as this one by Sarajane Helm, or this one on Amanda Day’s doll making site. This kind of play can also hone your skills at sculpting in general as you learn to push and manipulate the clay in ways you might not do when building functional or wearable art. And yes, I will be glad to be the blamable source if you fall in love with sculpting faces.

Thanks to Tommie Montgomery for suggesting we check out Joyce’s fun work today!

Stealing Texture

June 12, 2013

Sculpture works with all kinds of subtle and not so subtle textures, often both visual and tactile. Fantasy sculpture in particular offers some wonderfully inventive textures that can be pulled or used for inspiration for all kinds of other polymer work, not just sculpture.

There is no authority to say what skin, scales, wings, or anything else on a fantasy figure should look like, so the suppositions of the artist creating them can result in all kinds of fantastical colors, textures, and patterning you might not have seen before or might not expect. I love the effect Celia Harris created on the tail of her young fairy mermaid here, and the wings are quite lovely as well. But such effects don’t need to be relegated to wings and the slick skin of aquatic creatures.

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Can you imagine some light earrings with the sheen and maybe even the punched out holes and ragged edges of the wings? The visual texture of the tail would be charming on a pod shaped pendant, or as a contrasting layer of texture on a vase covered in pearl clay.

For tactile texture, I don’t know if there is anyone that works in fantasy sculpture that can quite compare to Virginie Ropars. I really enjoy how well the texture shows without heavy competition with color. The honeycomb of perforations and the flow of sculpted lines on the chest and in the hairline are lovely and translatable to almost any other form, if you find yourself drawn to that kind of texture.

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Bottom line: look at the components of sculpture — or any artwork — for inspiration, rather than the whole of a piece, and let your creativity translate it into whatever forms you prefer to work in.

Decorative Figurative

June 11, 2013

Figurative sculpture, of course, doesn’t need to be literal. In fact, with polymer, you have this wide open invitation to play with shape, color, texture, etc., and just go wild because… why not?

Gera Scott Chandler has become one of my favorite artists in recent years because of her very unique style, sense of playfulness, and rather emotive work. These muses below appear so optimistic and benevolent due to the facial expression and stance, with a joy and liveliness radiating from the mix of color and texture. It’s quite the metaphor for moments of great inspiration.

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This kind of work is a brilliant (pun intended!) example of how techniques and approaches in polymer can cross over from jewelry or decor to sculpture. There is a freedom in this kind of sculpture that, if you haven’t already, you should try. You can even use your favorite jewelry or decor techniques. You don’t have the engineering of how a piece of jewelry will hang or the restrictions of the functionality or form of a piece of home decor. And if you usually do more realistic sculpture, taking a stab at this looser approach will allow you to let go of the reality of forms so you can just play. Its just pure art and pure expression, which you may find to be a wonderful way to get your creativity to get up and stretch a bit.

 

Figurative Inspiration

June 10, 2013

(Because a couple people were concerned about the appropriateness of nudity in a piece I presented in a post last year, I am giving fair warning that the sculpture here is topless, although without any easily discernible details. I cannot eliminate artwork that includes tasteful nudity from the examples here if this blog is to fairly represent the breadth of our art form, but I do understand some people aren’t comfortable with it, so I will give a heads up when present.)

We have spent a lot of time on jewelry the last couple weeks so I thought we’d switch it up and focus on another popular polymer form: sculpture. A lot of you will think, oh, this isn’t going to apply to what I do. But if there is any form of polymer art that can be said to apply to the broadest spectrum of polymer clayers, it would be sculptural work.

We work with a sculptural material. Our initial manipulation of polymer will be sculptural, if only at the most base level of creating and cutting, punching or otherwise changing a smooth thin sheet of clay. It is still three-dimensional manipulation of a material and therefore sculptural. The tools used in figurative sculpture, consideration for how to handle the clay, textures, development of forms and mixing of color are applicable to nearly all other type of polymer artwork.

The first idea I wanted to chat about is the figurative element in sculpture — the beauty and inspiration you can take from the human form. The components of the human body come in such a variety of shapes, textures, colors, and structures; and because we are working in a material particularly suited to recreating whatever the imagination can think up, we aren’t really restricted to even the wide myriad of choices we have in reality.

Forest Rogers‘ voice in sculpture, especially as it is in our medium, is so vibrant, dynamic and unique, and her work plays almost exclusively off the human form. The breezy, almost organic transformation of this figure’s legs in this piece, Sea Maid’s Music,  echos the movement of flying, merging the human figure with the feel of wind (a visual metaphor for the music alluded to in the title, I would presume).

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Even if you don’t create sculpture, the gradation of colors, the textures in the wings and the sea creature’s scales, and the patterning on the base are inspirational and translatable into any type of polymer work. And if you sculpt but tend to be more literal, does this not give you ideas about pushing representational work a bit beyond reality, or adding more motifs and movement to  your work?

Although I don’t create a lot of sculpture, I do return regularly to Forest’s pages for inspiration as well as a good heavy dose of amazement and beauty. She has a new page up, with some of her most recent work ready to click through on the right hand side. Enjoy a little time with her work and the constant question that will undoubtedly arise: “Where did the idea for that come from?”

The Value of Flowers

June 9, 2013

 

 

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The same could be said of the beauty of art work. You make someone stop, smile, ponder, appreciate … and what are all the functional, purposeful items in the world, compared to a moment of being stunned by the beauty or message of a true piece of art? It is an experience versus an object. An object can be lost or set aside, but an experience you will have all your life to build on and cherish.

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