Showing posts with label ironwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ironwork. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Ayako Miyawaki Applique and Medieval Italian Ironwork







Two images which have been on my mind lately-- applique done in 1986 by the artist Ayako Miyawaki, and ironwork from the 14th c Tomb of Cansigniorio, Verona.
The similarity is in the shapes.  I don't know the inspiration for the ironwork, but the Miyawaki is called "Burdocks", which is a thistle of many varieties that grows wild in Japan and, as it turns out, here in Texas as well. In fact, they take over the pastures behind our house every spring, growing as tall as 4'.  Even though it's everywhere, I had no idea what the plant was called until I looked it up for this post.
No coincidence that I'm attracted to the familiarity of a form I see every day-- even when it appears in two such diverse works of art.

















































I love, love the detail of the Miyawaki-- the overlapping shapes and patterns, and the irregular stitching on the stem...... and of course the color.
The ironwork has a rough, flat, uneven quality which is charming, and how about those little ladders in the center of each clover? Possibly a reference to death, transcendence, heaven, what-will- happen-to-my-soul? Very medieval Christianity.  In any case, I find them whimsical, which may not exactly have been the intention.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

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"