Showing posts with label recycled art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycled art. Show all posts

Monday, May 14, 2012

The Natural World of Horror

(Above) Classic Griffin: components; rooster, wildcat, turkey.

(Above) North Woods Chimera: components; raccoon, wild turkey and pheasant.
(Above) Ebony Griffin: components; rooster, wildcat, turkey and antler spikes.
(Above) Mother’s Little Helper Monkey: components; monkey, wings of bird.
(Above) Der Wolpertinger: components; fox fangs, roe deer antlers, partridge wings, duck feet.

The Wolpertinger is a make-believe creature of German folklore, supposedly living in the alpine forests of Bavaria. It possesses the body parts of several common game animals; portrayed with wings, antlers, and fangs, all attached to the body of a small mammal. Stuffed Wolpertingers are common Bavarian Inn mascots, often displayed alongside real Black Forest taxidermy hunting trophies. Each village has its own set of tales about sightings of the Wolpertinger, however unlike other cryptoids (Bigfoot, Loch Ness monster, etc.) people don’t likely believe Wolpertingers actually exist – Wolpertingers hold the same place in German folklore as the Jackalope holds in the United States. Like the Jackalope, the Wolpertinger is thought to have been inspired by sightings of wild rabbits infected with the Shope papilloma virus which causes the growth of antler-like tumors in various places on the rabbit’s head and body. Wolpertinger mounts are staples in their native regions, but rarely appear in the United states or anywhere else outside their homeland. Constructed with all traditional animals components.


(Above) Ivory Griffin: components; rooster, wildcat, turkey.
(Above) Winged Bunny: components; newborn angora rabbit, dyed starling wings.
(Above) Punk Peep: dyed baby chick, two heads.

(Above) Felid Orthus: components; cats, bird wings, antlers, snake and claws of bird.
(Above) Winged Kitten: components; small cat and wings of bird.




ARTIST AND NATURALIST SARINA BREWER recycles the natural into the unnatural, breathing new life into the animals she resurrects. While earning her BFA in 1992 from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, she worked predominantly with oil paint and found objects, most of which were animal remains. Preparing animal remains for use in her sculpture and abstract paintings slowly evolved into taxidermy over the course of a decade. Brewer is now a licensed taxidermist as well as a prolific artist. She volunteers her skills in the biology department of the Science Museum of Minnesota and is also engaged in various natural history related projects for other educational institutions and museums. She is a strong proponent of wildlife conservation who also participates in wildlife rescue and rehabilitation.

None of the animals used in Brewer’s work were killed for the purpose of using them in her art. All animal components are recycled. She utilizes salvaged roadkill and discarded livestock, as well as the many animal materials that are donated to her. Donated animals are often casualties of the pet trade, destroyed nuisance animals and pests, or animals that died of natural causes. A very strict “waste not, want not” policy is adhered to in her studio - virtually every part of the animal is recycled in some manner.

This artist has a deep respect and appreciation for animals and the natural world. She is fascinated with the circle of life and intrigued with how different cultures honor their dead and deal with death. Immortalizing loved ones (be they animals or humans ) by preserving their remains or creating sentimental remembrances out of their body parts does not sit well with the majority of western society and is unfathomable to the average thinker. Yet such practices have been the norm in many cultures throughout history and still are. Undoubtedly the average American thinks such abhorrent practices are only carried out by “savages” in primitive cultures, yet they even exist in this day and age in the “civilized” world, a well known example being the preserved remains of saints on display in Catholic Churches around the world. Point being, reverence is relative. This artist deals with death, in what is considered by most, an unconventional manner. She does not view a dead animal as disgusting or offensive. She feels that all creatures exhibit beauty in death, as well as in life, and pays homage to them by reincarnating them in her works of art. 

Brewer is a self-proclaimed science nerd who incorporates her past formal art education with her passion for biology and the bizarre. Her childhood preoccupation with cryptozoology and anomalies of nature manifest themselves in her outlandish reveries of fur and flesh and every peculiar artifact she creates. These influences, combined with a slightly dark sense of humor, have carved out an unusual niche for Brewer in the art world. She specializes in creating fictional composite animals and sideshow gaffs for discerning collectors and the many connoisseurs of the curious around the world. We now invite you to peruse the culmination of nearly three decades of the study of art and the natural sciences in her eccentric works.

Learn more about Sarina Brewer on her Web site here.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Using What Remains

(Above) Sayaka Kajita Ganz at work in her Fort Wayne, IN studio.

(Above) “Wind” 2008: 63” x 78” x 26”; reclaimed (mostly white and clear) plastic objects. Click for larger view.

(Above) “Wind” 2008: detail.

(Above) “Undulate” 2009: 17” x 27” x 17”; reclaimed (mostly white and clear) plastic objects.

(Above) “Undulate” 2009: view 2

(Above) “Fogo” 2008: 32” x 110” x 26”; reclaimed (mostly red and orange) plastic objects.

(Above) “Fogo” 2008: view 2

(Above) “Night” 2008: 72” x 50” x 17”; reclaimed (mostly black and clear) plastic objects.

(Above) “Night” 2008: detail

(Above) “Night” 2008: detail

(Above) “Night” 2008: detail


SAYAKA KAJITA GANZ uses what the industrial world creates as fodder for her art. Born in Japan but growing up in several countries, Ganz says she felt a sense of “disconnectedness” from the place in which she was born. Now living in humble, blue collar Fort Wayne, Indiana, Ganz says she uses plastic objects from peoples’ homes to breathe a new life into their original use. Reclaimed objects now transcending their origins—Ganz see’s this process as similar to her own life, and she identifies with this in her art. Ganz says this process of reclamation and regeneration is “liberating to her as an artist.”

See more about this important emerging artist here.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Do Monsters Have to Get In Every Picture?










RELLENO DE MONO IS AN ILLUSTRATOR FROM CHILE who restates old snapshots with fresh new interpretations. His monsters are happy creatures who have no trouble blending in and becoming part of, the human experience. His monsters are fun, silly and by all appearances, have been with us always. Adults like them as well as children—no one seems to mind that the big buffoonish, balloon-like fellas are always butting in on our face time in front of the camera. I tell you this, the world would be a happier place if Relleno had his way.

See more on Relleno de Mono’s amazing work here, on Flickr.


All images © copyright Relleno De Mono.

Monday, April 5, 2010

New Life for Old China









I FOUND THESE GREAT RECYCLED PLATES on Etsy. Alan Moyes is the artist, and his work speaks to me. It might to you too, so check it out here. Alan’s work gets the official “Accidental Mysteries Seal of Approval.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Plate Tectonics: The Art of Karen Ryan

Click on any image for larger view.


Click on any image for larger view.



Click on any image for larger view.




Click on any image for larger view.


KAREN RYAN LIVES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND MAKES A VARIETY OF ART, from furniture installations made of chairs to rethinking design and its impact on society. I think she is doing some important work. When I caught a glimpse of these plates I went sort of kooky over them. So of course, here they are for you, dear readers.

First of all, let’s look at “the dinner plate.” Ever since man quit eating off of the cave floor, he devised a platform on which to put his food. This became the “plate,” as we know it. There are full plates which represent one thing (wealth, for example)—and empty plates, which can represent another (poverty). Pattern and decoration have adorned plates for centuries, so what Karen Ryan does in removing the existing meaningless glazed surface decoration is a process that renders this adornment in a new context. For the first time since these plates were made, they actually speak with a new voice. How she makes her art is the part that doesn’t matter. What does matter is that she has transformed these plates into something different— powerful, word-driven objects that recontextualize the humble (and even not so humble) dinner plate into a new vehicle for art.

Learn more about this artist here.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Face Sculptures

(Above) An ordinary cardboard toilet paper roll.
Click any image for larger view.
Click image for larger view.

Click any image for larger view.
WHAT TO DO WITH LEFT OVER TOILET PAPER ROLLS? JUNIOR JACQUET of France has an answer that works for him. He recycles and reuses these cardboard rolls into a legion of odd characters with contorted faces. His process is simple: Jacquet paints—then pushes and pulls the cardboard roll, slowly revealing his next character.

Learn more about the artist at Village of Joy.

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