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Showing posts with label hand-painted ceramics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hand-painted ceramics. Show all posts
Have A Little Heart This Valentine's Day. Here's 64 To Choose From.
This large selection of handmade Italian ceramic hearts designed and decorated by various artists are designed to cover every gamut of love from desire to heartbreak. Each individual heart measures approximately 5x12 cm and makes a great paperweight in addition to being a declaration of feelings. Some are interactive and others are simply decorative, but all of them are sweet.
In addition to unique ceramic hearts, Creativando makes other ceramic wares such as vases, paperweights and artist decorated butterflies. They also create furniture.
Creativando is inspired by a passion. From the passion of Laura Ellero and Mauro Bassani, the founders, for contemporary art and design. Hence the idea, at the beginning just a hobby, to "produce" gifts and everyday objects revisited with an artistic and graphic point of view. Nowadays Creativando distributes its products worldwide. The philosophy is very simple. A small artisan entreprise who made of creativity and service its strength. And that puts a lot of passion in all its work.
Environment and Made in Italy
Selected materials and maximum attention to product quality and manufacturing, a craftmanship for details, from concept to packaging. This allows us to offer a product that has all the value and reliability of the product Made in Italy.
Creativando
Ordinary Objects Become Art When Slip Cast and Painted by Shalene Valenzuela
There are numerous talented artists who hand paint ceramics. Even their own slip cast ceramics. (For those who don't know, slip-casting is one of the simplest methods of reproducing a replica of an original model). But what makes Shalene Valenzuela's work different is the items on which she is painting. Her ceramics are not tableware or homewares. Not pretty vases or wedding platters meant to be used in a functional way, but sculpture meant to make you think. Or laugh. Or both.
She paints mid-century retro imagery in a cartoon-like vintage advertising style on mundane objects she slip cast in ceramic. Irons, blenders, toasters, clocks, woollite bottles, pencil sharpeners, handguns, cell phones, women's shoes and more serve as her handmade canvases. Perfect replicas in white, she then adorns them with her whimsical visual commentary.
above: Shalene Valenzuela, On Thin Ice, slip cast ceramic, ribbon and paint
Some are a work of one item, always painted on all sides. Other pieces are sets, in which the boxes or containers, as well as the objects within, are also cast in ceramic and hand painted.
While many of the objects and their images clearly play off of female stereotypes from the Harlet to the Happy Homemaker to the Fashionista with a shoe fetish. Others mock religion, our vanity or are a statement of our society's addiction to television.
Regardless, they are as amusing to look at as to ponder. Here are a few of her fabulous pieces from 2002 to the present, in no particular order:
Woollite Bottles:
Toasters and Bread, front and back:
Milk Cartons (front and back):
Pee-Chees:
Pencil sharpener (front and back):
Oven pads:
Handguns:
Clocks:
99 Bottles:
detail of 99 Bottles:
Blenders:
Science Girls' Kit (interior and exterior):
Glue Bottles (front and back)
Shoes:
Shoes in Shoeboxes:
Irons:
Phones:
Paint Sets and Box:
above: Shalene Valenzuela at work
Her Artist Statement:"My body of work consists of quirky pieces that reflect upon a variety of issues with a thoughtful, yet humorous tone. I am inspired by the potential of everyday common objects. I reproduce these objects in clay through hand-building, slip casting, or a combination of the two, and illustrate the surfaces with a variety of hand painted and screen printed imagery.
I primarily obtain my imagery from remnants of the past (instructional guides, advertisements, family photos, tall tales), and reconstruct the images in order to convey my narrative. These narratives generally deal with topics ranging from fairy tales, urban mythologies, societal expectations, etiquette, and coming-of-age issues.
Stylistically, much of my imagery is pulled from sources around the 1950’s era. Through advertising, common objects were embraced in the most royal fashion, and through television and print, images of the “perfect Americana life” were portrayed.
One way of explaining my building aesthetic would be a form of trompe l’oiel with a twist. The preciousness of clay as a medium helps transform my depicted common household item into something magical. I care about the object being referenced and recognizable while maintaining an illustrative, and almost “cartoonish” quality at times.
Sometimes my inspirations are just pure whimsy, and I find nothing wrong with that. Rules are sometimes meant to be broken- how else are we supposed to learn?"
You can find some of Shalene's work at the following galleries or her etsy store:
Guardino Gallery
Clay Studio of Missoula
John Natsoulas Gallery Gift Shop
Tin Lark Gallery
Shalene Valenzuela
ceramic art & whatnot
838 poplar st, missoula, mt 59802
shalenevalenzuela@gmail.com
www.shalene.com
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