14
Feb/11
2

the table, finished

final table with chairs blog

Did I mention that it's Valentine's Day?

This weekend I put the finishing touches on the table, and with the help of my friend Jeff I was able to get it installed in the dining room on Sunday.  It was an exquisite moment, securing the top and seeing things in their final form for the first time.  This table had existed only in my imagination for years.   Even as the pieces took shape during the past two months, the final synthesis retained its sense of mystery.  It is one of the wonders of making objects in the world, that not all things can be anticipated.  In this case the surprises were pleasant.  I used water-based stain (my home-made walnut stain) and water-borne polyurethane for the finish, allowing me to work safely and effectively indoors during the cold weather.  Although the manufacturer warned against the use of steel wool between coats (to avoid rust spots from the dust, I assume), I went ahead and rubbed out the final coat with good results.  I’ll let the finish shrink back for a while before I decide whether or not to use paste wax for a final coat.

Applying the home-made walnut stain, fast and furious-- I've now added an HVLP gun to my "need" list.

Applying the home-made walnut stain, fast and furious-- I've now added an HVLP gun to my "need" list.

Table base assembly, which breaks down into six component parts (not including the pins for the through-tenons).

Table base assembly, which breaks down into six component parts (not including the pins for the through-tenons).

The curve on the bottom of the central stretcher becomes evident when juxtaposed with the edge of the table top.

The curve on the bottom of the central stretcher becomes evident when juxtaposed with the edge of the table top.

The quarter-sawn oak has a rich assortment of rays, and the wide boards simultaneously harmonize and distance themselves from the floor.

The quarter-sawn oak has a rich assortment of rays, and the wide boards simultaneously harmonize with and distance themselves from the floor.

The edge of the top has a slight chamfer, and the lower edge is undercut at a 15 degree angle to take away some of its visual weight.  It didn't do much to alleviate the actual weight of the top, which is about 7/8" thick.

The upper edge of the top has a slight chamfer, and the lower edge is undercut at a 15 degree angle to take away some of the visual weight. The actual weight is another matter-- it takes two people to move the top, which is about 7/8" thick.

12
Dec/10
0

leaf litter

ARACEA, Dieffenbachia sp.

ARACEA, Dieffenbachia sp.

SAPINDACEAE, Acer saccharinum

SAPINDACEAE, Acer saccharinum (yes, it's a pun)

POACEAE

POACEAE

This semester I have been taking a night class called Plants of Missouri with Dr. Peter Hoch of the Missouri Botanical Garden.  Dr. Hoch was kind enough to allow me to create a body of art work instead of a more traditional research paper as an investigation of the topics covered in the course.  In his book Plants, Man, and Life, Edgar Anderson observes that the plants most familiar to us are, paradoxically, some of the least understood.  This  struck me as synonymous with my own observations regarding a growing collection of objects culled from the trash that blows or is dropped into my front yard.  I spent half a day at the Missouri Botanical Garden Herbarium with Anna Spencer learning to properly mount and label plant specimens.  I did my best to apply these standards to the production of my own collection– silk and plastic leaves, grass, flowers, and even jewelry that I have collected from my yard and neighborhood.  Each specimen was identified as closely as possible, although I did take some liberties when puns were irresistible or when the plant was too fictitious.  The seed packets (small envelopes attached to each specimen sheet) contain not just plant matter but other objects of interest or oddness, the qualifying factor being that each was an item which had been lost or discarded and then found by me.  I include my artist’s statement here:

“An artifact, by definition, is something produced by man, something which we would not have had if man had not come into being.  That is what many of our weeds and crops really are.  Though man did not wittingly produce all of them, some are as much dependent on him, as much a result of his cultures, as a temple or a vase or an automobile.

…The vegetation of many a remote mountain range is better understood than the common flowers and weeds in your garden.”                    – Edgar Anderson

Leaf Litter

I have taken Edgar Anderson’s observations as a challenge, and this collection of specimens represents my attempt to gain an understanding of, or to insist upon, the significance of some of the most familiar aspects of my own front yard.  My house sits on the north side of Delmar Boulevard in the most remote corner of the Central West End.  Anderson mentions the persistence of sunflowers along roadsides, but when we purchased this house ten years ago I quickly realized that the most common volunteer on my lawn and in my garden would be trash.  The daily chore of picking up this trash is often annoying and sometimes nauseating, but occasionally it becomes quite funny and interesting when I find remnants of silk or plastic plants.  These are the culture’s annuals, the opportunists on disturbed ground.  But their succession is social, not botanical, and I found my yard to be what I would now describe as an ecotone, a transitional space between nature and culture.

This project is fraught with paradox, and it begins with our culture’s stiff imitation of living organisms: we cure death by removing life.  It preserves what has been discarded, makes use of the useless, and adopts scientific forms for artistic ends.  I accept this tension because it so well captures the complexity of our lives, the lacework of personal and public experience which allows small things to be meaningful to us in large ways.  While insisting on degrees of certainty, I have allowed for just as much mystery.  Each specimen emerges as a unique web of educated guesses, assumptions, facts and fictions.  They are stories spun out of botanical fragments which are complicated, corroborated, and implicated by the objects that accompany them.

The next stage of this project will be to create a proper digital archive of the specimens, at which point the inclusion of a color target and scale add the density of information.  This is my preference for presentation as a fixed image– those included above are just snapshots, a glimpse for the time being.  The works are meant to be more interactive when seen in person, as the slow revelation of ingredients as they are found in the seed packet shapes the story that unfolds on each page.

5
Nov/10
1

recent work

lunette/flume, headstone/tomb: for Li Bai

lunette/flume, headstone/tomb (for Li Bai)

We had a Washington University faculty exhibition at the Des Lee Gallery last month, which was a good excuse to finish a new painting and try a different form of presentation.  Instead of using the word “installation”, I might use something like “actualization”, as the point of the piece was to enhance the viewer’s awareness of the object-presence, material relationships, imaginative space, and historical (or anecdotal) reference with near simultaneity.  This poses an interesting set of problems in a gallery context because of the associated conventions for displaying and interacting with the work.  Lunette is painted on a sheet of sandpaper from a floor-sander, and features a wooden remnant from some plumbing work in my house.  The painting is hung about ten inches lower than normal, a kind of “setting” towards the bench which is meant to emphasize their relationship while encouraging the viewer to lean over.  I made the frame out of African Mahogany flooring reclaimed from my neighbor’s house.  It is the same species of wood that I used to build the bench, wood which had been discarded because of the extreme warping and cupping that it had undergone.

Collectively the work is meant to invoke rather than portray the ingredients of the poet Li Bai’s anecdotal demise– intoxicated, falling from his boat and drowning while trying to embrace the reflection of the moon.

3
Nov/10
1

a selective memory

catepillar before blog

tobacco horn worm, speckled with fate

caterpillars blog

Florence's drawing

the husk of the host

the husk of the host

In September we found a few tobacco horn worms on our tomato plants, and decided that we were willing to share our produce in exchange for the privilege of seeing the world at work in our front yard.  But the wonder and beauty turned macabre when two of the worms were parasitized by Braconid wasp larvae.  Our 4 year old was not prepared for this plot shift.  One morning soon after this discovery, I went over to see the drawing that Florence had been making.  She told me that she was making a drawing of the caterpillars so that she could remember them as they were before the wasps got to them.  I could hardly think of a better reason to make a picture.  In an academic context it is particularly easy to lose track of the fundamentals which would otherwise guide my creative action.  I am distracted by nuance.  To see things in a particular way, and to convey that vision–to drag a selective past into the present with insistence, relevance, and a joy clarified by sorrow– is something worth doing.