Thursday, April 07, 2011

Seattle Storefront Opening

Pollinatrix will officially open tonight, April 7:

Please join Storefronts Seattle, along with Shunpike, SCIDpda,  the Alliance for Pioneer Square, the Seattle Office for Arts and Cultural Affairs, the Seattle Department of Planning and Development, and the CIDBIA for 

FIRST THURSDAY
Thursday, April 7, 5:30 pm - 9pm
in Pioneer Square and the Chinatown / International District for a 
HOSTED RECEPTION for the Spring 2011 Round of Storefronts Artists
from 5:30 pm, at the xom fine woodworking gallery, 610 Second Avenue between James and Cherry
featuring a walking tour of the Spring 2011 art and artists: 

The Gala Opening of The Poster Museum
The Premiere of new work by Elizabeth Gahan
The Gala Opening of Cassie Hibbert Design
The Premiere of new work by John Fleming
The Premiere of new work by Ben Hirschkoff
An Open House for the New Mystics' new Residency
The Premiere of new work by Romson Regarde Bustillo
The Premiere of new work by Kristin Tollefson
The continuing great work of Allison Piskorowski, Architecture 101, the Seattle Pinball Museum, and xom fine woodworking

"This innovative program is a great collaboration between our 
business and art communities. Storefronts Seattle shines a
spotlight on Seattle’s creative sector, brings new life to empty 
storefronts and enlivens our neighborhood business districts.”

- Mayor Mike McGinn

Please see http://storefrontsseattle.com for more information about the artists and the opening reception, or email Program Manager Matthew Richter at matthew@shunpike.org

Pollinatrix: Seattle Storefronts





I'm pleased to announce an installation entitled Pollinatrix, featured as part of the 2011 Seattle Storefronts program, designed to activate vacant storefronts with art and creative ventures.  From March 15 through June 15, the piece can be viewed at all hours of the day or night in the windows of 409 Maynard Avenue South in the International District. 

Over the course of the three-month stretch, I will be maintaining a blog about Pollinatrix to document the work and announce time-based engagements with the space.  Look here for upcoming acts as they unfold.

Thursday, December 02, 2010

What I Gathered


New small print and sculptural work at the Bainbridge Island Library December 3 - 30, with an opening reception this Friday, December 3 from 5-7pm.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Raintree







More images from a busy summer of public art. Raintree is located in the stormwater runoff pond at the newly redesigned Cromwell Park in Shoreline. A collaboration between Public Works and the Parks and Recreation Department, this park was transformed from a flat grass lot to an undulating, functional and more naturalized gathering place.

Many logs were unearthed from the boggy ground during regrading, some of which remain exposed as landscaping features. This work draws influence from them, the purpose of the site, and the flow that occurs between the exchange of water there.



Saturday, June 05, 2010

Dew Beads







Dew Beads, dedicated July 2010 in Shoreline's Hamlin Park.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

Ivy Art at Blakely Harbor Park






Yesterday was the culmination of months of work done in Blakely Harbor Park by 7th and 8th grade students from Odyssey Middle School. They made numerous trips to the site to pull English Ivy from a site at the water's edge, test water quality and learn about the site's history.

Their teacher, Elizabeth Vroom, applied for funding from the Bainbridge Schools Foundation, the BIAHC Arts Consortium, and the Wendy Jackson Hall Memorial Mentorship Fund to add an art component to their investigations, which allowed me to come and work with her class. Over the course of three visits, students learned about site-specific and ephemeral environmental installation artwork, conceptualized their sculptural work for the site, articulated these visions in words, and created drawings and origami doves for the actual piece.

The day of building and installing was remarkable: in the rain, mud and wind, everyone worked with intention. Teams of 3 and 4 students fabricated their portion of an ivy rope, joined the parts, and suspended the results. The meandering ivy cable circumscribed the site that had been cleared of the non-native invasive, offering a surprise to passersby (including numerous classes from IslandWood) or conscientious visitors to the park. The work will be up until Sunday morning at 10am, June 6.

Wonderful photos by Larry Steagall of the Kitsap Sun can be seen in conjunction with the article by Tristan Baurick. Video footage will be available shortly at BITV.

Earth Day at Earthworks






We celebrated Earth Day on April 22 at the Herber Bayer Earthworks at Mill Creek Canyon Park. This magical event was coordinated by Cheryl dos Remedios, and featuring Paul Rucker, Mandy Greer, and Aiko Kinoshita's acornDance troupe. I had great help from Sydney Brown, Taylor Norton and Karina Nyquist, students of mine from Cornish College of the Arts. The leaf boat luminaria on the ring pond were a hit.

The City of Kent produced a lovely video commemorating this event -- see it here.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

How to Make a Park: Redmond's Northeast Neighborhood






Northeast Neighborhood Park sits on the farthest northern edge of incorporated Redmond. A wooded haven in the midst of subdivisions, this park was the subject of a Master Plan conducted by Nakano Associates and a team including wetland biologist Cathie Connolly of ESA Adolfson and me, working as consulting artist and educator.

Watching this project evolve from concept to a work party on July 18, 2009 during which community members built the beginning of their park was awe-inspiring. The amount of support given by the City Council and the Redmond Parks and Recreation Department proves that positive, directed energy regenerates itself.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Heaven & Earth


A glimpse of the work in Piper's Orchard at Carkeek Park, on display until August 10. For more information, see the Heaven & Earth website.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Lace Leaf Bicycle Racks





Lace Leaf Bike Racks are sprouting on the sidewalks of downtown Kent, WA, this spring! Special consideration was given to the function of the racks as well as their style; designed for parking two bicycles, these racks reflect the city's renewed emphasis on health, growth and the natural environment.

Special thanks go to the Kent Downtown Partnership, the Kent Arts Commission, the Kent Planning and Public Works Departments, the panelists on the selection committee, Cheryl dos Remedios, and Dero.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

New Bicycle Racks



Here's a preview of the new sculptural bike parking for the Kent Downtown Partnership. Shown is the fabricated frame in its powdercoated state: the proposal drawing depicts the rack with hand painted detail and resin insets, to be completed by the artist. The Lace Leaf Bicycle Racks will be installed in early 2009.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

in the Flow


I am honored to be included in a two-person show with David Eisenhour at Port Angeles Fine Arts Center.

Entitled Two in the Flow, the show features a common thread of organic forms in a variety of materials, and is beautifully hung throughout the gallery. The exhibit is on display July 13 - October 5, 2008.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Work in Progress


The working model of the sculpture, held in place by David Strauss and ably assisted by Chris Armes, both of SHKS Architects. Constructed of a true madrona branch and red painted paper, the piece serves as an indicator of scale and overall appearance for the indoor sculpture.

Context and Initial Thoughts






From top to bottom:
Arbutus menziesii illustration, courtesy of Southwest School of Botanical Medicine's fabulous resource.
Bead/Flow, installation by the artist at Port Angeles Fine Art Center, Washington.
Pomegranate detail of bronze frame sculpture at Aereoporto Galileo Galilei, Pisa, Italy.
Ilex pollen grain illustration by the artist.
Stair and railing detail of Magnolia library 34th street entrance.

Beginning


Children waiting for the opening of the original Magnolia Bluff Station of the Seattle Public Library. The window, the anticipation, the treasures inside.

Catch + Release





The Magnolia Public Library opened this weekend, and featured Catch + Release, a new pair of sculptures that inhabit spaces in and out of the newly constructed meeting room addition by SHKS Architects.

Designed to connect interior and exterior spaces by relating to this lovely south-facing window of the library, the works refer both to the madrona tree around which the original library and landscape architecture was conceived and to the function of the library as disseminator and patrons as collectors of information.

The work is made of steel and hand-cast polyurethane resin.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Magnolia Library Artwork

Catch + Release is a pair of site-specific sculptures created for the Magnolia Library: a branch suspended from the ceiling of the meeting room above the south window and a basket outside the south window. The pieces connect interior to exterior, recall the landscape history of the Magnolia Library site and allude to the function of the library and the patrons who use it.

The interior branch is woven of blackened annealed steel wire using a basket technique, and studded with large, handmade red and orange polyurethane resin beads. This structure hangs from the ceiling at an angle that is visible from the main part of the library, gesturing toward the south window. This window forms a connection to the exterior basket, which is located just outside. Constructed of stainless steel, additional cast resin beads are suspended on the basket’s vertical ribs. Light and shadow also link the two sculptures: the branch is lit from a high angle toward the south wall, broadcasting shadowy lines from the wire and ghostly color from the resin, while the basket is lit from below, illuminating the “berries” and reflecting off the basket in the dark.

The madrona tree around which the original building and landscape architecture was designed provides the conceptual framework for Catch + Release. The suspended branch and its resin beads mimic the mature fruiting arbutus, and invite nature inside the building; outside, the basket captures additional berries. The title Catch + Release refers to these actions of fruiting and gathering, paired activities of nature and humans that work as a metaphor for the relationship between library as information provider and patrons as collectors and disseminators.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Leafboat Benches at Hiawatha Artists Lofts







These resin and steel benches can be seen at the Hiawatha Artists' Lofts on Charles Street, just a block to the east of Rainier Avenue South. The seats suggest leaf boats made by children to float down streams, relating to the bioswale/raingarden they flank. The leaves are both archetypical shapes and specific to the site: Scarlet Oak, Vine Maple and Serviceberry. This project was sponsored jointly by Artspace and a Seattle Department of Neighborhoods Grant.