big bold ring

September 7, 2010

this large oval ring is etched, hydraulic pressed, and fabricated out of sterling silver. it was a lot of fun to make and a one-of-a-kind piece. it sold at the Craft and Folk Art Museum earlier this summer.

sunday morning hike

July 13, 2010
a foggy sunday morning hike in palos verdes. the path was luscious and green, but also speckled with charred remnants from a past canyon fire.

names…

June 28, 2010




a few name necklaces I’ve had the opportunity to design and make. each one is sketched and then cut out by my own two hands. they’re always fun to make and i hope equally fun to wear!

Boey

June 7, 2010

maybe i’m a little biased since i’m a seller on etsy, but i have to say that i love etsy because i come across artists and makers that i otherwise might not find. i stumbled upon these beauties the other day.

Cheeming Boey makes these awesome hand-drawn styrofoam cups…
check em out at his etsy shop, boyobsolete.

also, his website is a new favorite of mine. the journals are wicked funny, simple, and honest.
iamboey.com

birds of a feather

May 8, 2010


the hall of birds
an evening at the natural history museum in los angeles

the desert

April 19, 2010
Day trip to the Salton Sea and Salvation Mountain

Sightings and Events (if memory serves me correct from this trip taken a couple weeks ago):
wind farms and date trees on the way there, a really tan guy in a speedo (corvette guy) photographing himself, flocks of giant pelican-like birds, ice cream truck (nothing beats a strawberry shortcake ice cream in the warm desert sun), bone/barnacle/specimen collecting, plenty of tilapia carcasses on the shores (and people fishing for them too), Salvation Mountain (that’s all made out of bales of hay, tires, and TONS of paint!) and getting a tour from Leonard Knight, half-buried homes and trailers, and a beautiful salt crystallized mechanical crane…

on the path to work

April 12, 2010

‘still waters run deep’

April 2, 2010


This is the other piece I recently finished for the “Common Threads” show. Similar in nature to my ‘Silent Sorrows’ piece, which has a hundred flesh-like rocks raining down from the ceiling, this work also uses the tear-like stones and chain. But instead of a massive downpour, this is simply a single line which emanates from a little plant. They are connected. There is the struggle of sorrow. But there is also endurance. And hope.

‘make haste slowly’

One thing I noticed at the gallery at Coastline Community College were these 3 inch diameter support beams that were sort of in the middle of the space. You can’t just move them since they’re part of the structure and I wanted to make a piece that would interact with them. Since I’ve always been drawn to details outside like plants growing out of cracks in the sidewalk, I decided to embrace the cement crack that was already there and create this vine/plant (made of bronze) that is entwining itself up the pipe. It was such a small detail in the gallery that I am unsure as to how many people actually noticed it, but that is partially what I find interesting about it.

Slinkachu

April 1, 2010



Okay, so it comes to no surprise (to anyone in the arts and education) to see miniature people from model shops being used in art work. In fact, sometimes it gets to be really redundant. Sure, they’re small and cute, but then what? Why? Then this weekend my mom (who is not an artist but is curious by nature and has an amazingly open and creative mind!) showed me this book “Little People in the City” by Slinkachu (UK based artist). The images/installations are hilarious and contemplative with the perfect blend of cleverness and commentary on urban life and its dwellers.These tiny lives parallel our own (indeed, they are set-up in and around the city), and give us a chance to not only notice something small but make us take a closer look at our surroundings and actions.