Showing posts with label Fritz Kuhn blacksmith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fritz Kuhn blacksmith. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Fritz Kuhn: Iron and Apples





I'm always struck when an artist takes  radically different ideas, like iron and apples, and brings them together in one work of art. I love the delicacy of Kuhn's initial sketches, which emphasize the fullness and ripeness of the apples. He evokes that sense of life in the finished ironwork (second  photo) through his use of abstracted shapes, solid and void, rhythm and repetition. I'm especially taken with the ink wash studies (bottom photo), as pattern and movement in a 2D format is something of particular interest to me right now.  This is a great example of  the development of an artist's work, one which clearly illustrates the evolution of specific ideas, and how they all come together in the finished product.

- Photo credits: "Fritz Kuhn, Stahl Und Metallarbeiten"

Fritz Kuhn Iron work

























Maybe it's the iron locks and nails on the clothespin scarf
that got me thinking about ironwork. Having grown up in New Orleans, I was surrounded by lots of old cast and wrought ironwork. These images are from a book on Fritz Kuhn that caught my eye in the ironwork section of the library last week. (So lucky to have access to a library with such a section....)  I really like the patterns and sculptural quality of his work. 
Iron and silk scarves-- all in one week--  reminds me to stay open to the expansiveness of one's creative affinities.


- Photo credits: "Fritz Kuhn, Stahl Und Metallarbeiten"

Fritz Kuhn Blacksmith



                                                                 



This is ironwork by a blacksmith named Fritz Kuhn who worked in Germany from the 1920's-50's. Information about him is scarce-- I scanned these photos from a library book written in German which, unfortunately I don't read. In any case, beautiful work-- love the spiky insects.
- Photo credits: "Fritz Kuhn, Stahl Und Metallarbeiten"