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~ Traveler / Artist / Photographer / Observer

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Category Archives: Photography

The mermaid emerges

22 Tuesday May 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Art, Learning, Photography, Sculpture, Uncategorized

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Tags

accidental image, art, foundry, hidden picture, lost wax, mermaid, mermaids, photography, sculpting, sculpture, wax

Sidewalk mermaid

The photo above is from a ‘photowalk’ around the streets of Boston. It’s one of my collection of “Accidental Images” or things that I see in images that are hidden in plain view waiting to be discovered. I host a group on-line that finds and posts the hidden pictures that we find. (More later on that… ) In this image of a broken and repaired sidewalk near a construction site, I see a mermaid. Do you see her?

At the hardware store I found small cans of alcohol used for camp stoves. I was told that most people now use Sterno, a solid fuel… but the alcohol gave off no odor and was a lot hotter than a candle. And, best of all made no soot. So, I broke out some clay tools and had a go at some shaping the rough sketch of the mermaid from yesterday’s post. She is emerging… but I’ve already decided that I like some of the tool marks and her wild hair gathered with a ribbon in a couple places in the back. I don’t feel she should be too ‘finished’. A face is probably a good idea as well. :) Still a lot of shaping to do and find something that I can press into the wax that will give the impression of fish scales. She’s emerging but far from done. If she turns out to be something that I’d want bronzed, we’ll visit the foundry in Boston.



Seeing in 3D

21 Monday May 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Abstract Macro Photography, Art, Learning, Photography, Sculpture, Uncategorized

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Tags

art, arts, clay, experimenting, foam, learning, materials, photography, polymer clay, sculpture, sculpture foam, sculpture wax, sculpy, wax

Spooky Woods

I call this image ‘Spooky Woods’. It reminds me of the winter woods around our house. It’s related to this post about sculpture and it accidentally happened in my studio. Want to know what it is? I explain at the bottom…

As an illustrator and graphic designer, I am drawn to the 3 dimensional forms of sculpture but… have not spent much time experimenting with any of the traditional medium. That is, with the exception of Sculpy… when Ben and Sam visit.

Sculpy mini food

We can sit for hours and create miniature worlds of food… or dogs… or whatever! The boys (eight and six) have that endless energy and natural creative that hasn’t been spoiled yet by ‘I can’t’.

Ben and Sam are my grandboys who live near Atlanta, Georgia… so the opportunities are not as numerous as we would like. But, when we get together there is always some sort of art project going on… and Sculpy is a favorite. The polymer clay in the small rectangular packages that is available in every craft store… in black, white and a rainbow of bright colors, subtle colors, pearlized colors… are a wonderful way to introduce “thinking in 3D” for art projects… self expression and even serious sculpture. We’ve made bracelets and rings, miniature hotdogs, pizzas, hamburgers, boxes of candy bonbons, rubber ducks, superheroes, dogs and pirates! A quick 15 minutes in the oven for the still pliable Sculpy figures and they are permanently hardened. Occasionally, a bit of craft glue is necessary to repair two pieces with a weak bond but Sculpy is pretty indestructible at that point.

Foam1

This material was fun to work with… although, I’m sure some fresher foam will be even better as the texture was something that was uncontrollable in the dried out stuff. You can see that the weird guy face that I made is so much smoother than the rest. That piece was the closest to the original texture of the foam. I’m more organic in my chosen forms and Rog is more… well… architectural, naturally. The flower shape is about 8 inches across and the leaf 12 inches.

What happened beyond the Sculpy projects is the interesting part for me. I found myself thinking in 3D more and more often. When a nephew, Rog, an architect, was visiting we broke out a few packages of a different kind of foam product that was left over from a project a few years ago and spent an afternoon pushing around the half dried out foamy stuff, making what ever popped into our heads. I have to find more of this white stuff. It was fun to work with and although what we had was pretty dried out, there was enough of a feel for what it would be like fresh to make us want to try again. When I find this again I’ll add the name here.

Foam2Foam3Foam4

Wax block

Wax block from the foundry – This stuff is so hard you can sand it. But, it melts really well and stays pliable a long time. It does burn if you touch it in a liquid state. You learn quickly when it can be touched!

Melting pot of wax

Once it’s off the burner, it starts cooling and is soft enough to work with… but the liquid wax is hot, sticks to the fingers and will burn… smells, too… lovely stuff.

What I really would like to do is make working in the dark red/brown sculptors wax work for me. I wrote a few days ago about melting some of it that I got from the Boston Foundry during a visit. It’s not easy to work with but it’s a matter of finding the right tools and learning how to keep the wax pliable enough to get the shapes and textures one wants. I’ve been melting the rock-like wax on the stove in the kitchen and carrying it to the studio where it sits on an electric buffet hot plate. I really don’t want to be transporting molten wax over the carpeted areas of the house… just in case the unthinkable would happen… so, today I went looking for a one burner hot plate and came home with a rice cooker. One burners are a thing of the past I was told however, I will be keeping an eye out in the consignment shops and places like salvation army. Meanwhile, the rice cooker has both a removable inside a hot setting for melting and a keep warm setting which may be sufficient for keeping the pliable red wax at the right degree of softness without burning my fingers. A call to my sister who is a dentist to get her opinion on sculpting with the electric pen tools that they use to sculpt teeth models for crown patients was productive. Lots to consider… meanwhile I’ll continue to push and pull and dig at the wax with the few tools I do have. The great advantage of the wax for small pieces is that the mold making process is eliminated along with the time and expense of making the mold, pouring wax in the mold and re-sculpting the wax sculpture before you can go on.

Mermaid

A rough wax ‘sketch’ of a mermaid sitting on a real rock. The refining of the lines begins with heating the tools over the flame and melting the wax surface to remove areas that have too much wax… and building where there is too little. Then working the surface to get the textures of the skin and hair. I’ve tried to confine my mess to a large jellyroll pan on my drawing desk.

•The image at the top that looks like a winter forest? Some of the wax melted between two pizza pans that I had sitting on a buffet hotplate. While the wax was liquid, I pulled the pans apart and that is what I saw. Cool!

It’s absorbing and compelling learning a new thing… a new technique… a new skill. We must be students all our lives… regardless of our interests and/or skills and past experience. Pick something you’ve never done before. Read about it. Then go and do it! Your brain will thank you for it!! Cheers!

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Through glass eyes

18 Friday May 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Abstract Macro Photography, Art, Photography, Uncategorized

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Tags

abstract, art, craft, glass, photography

Cerulean World

Cerulean World

Recently, in the Facebook pages where my art school friends have found each other 40 years after we left school… the discussion (which is always spirited and interesting with very different views) has turned to the art/craft of glass… and specifically the work of Dale Chihuly. A few have weighed in with differing opinions on whether or not they like the work, the artist, the media attention, the color and style, etc. The discussion got me thinking about the glass I’ve photographed and how attracted I am to it’s properties of light and reflection… color and suspended movement. It’s endlessly varied… a wonderful medium for artists with the skill and patience to work with it. A quick review of some of my collection of images resulted in a small collection of glass works… only one of which is the work of Mr. Chihuly. (Do you know which one?)

Untitled glass 4

Untitled glass 4

Untitled glass 2

Untitled glass 2

Untitled Glass 1

Untitled Glass 1

Untitled glass 6
Untitled glass 6

Untitled glass 7
Untitled glass 7

©Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Running in the yard.

14 Monday May 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Art, Photography, Uncategorized

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Tags

art, explore, home, inspiration, jack, learning, lost wax process, sculpture, sharing, time management, wax

Running Jack 1

Running Jack

I’m caught in some kind of vortex with numbers tumbling around me… not fast… but in slow motion… like a slow moving tornado that is sucking all the air out of every room I’m in!!

I just looked up from my computer and the latest project and glanced at the clock. Am I mistaken or was there no April this year? Funny, I would have sworn it was March. Guess I sort of missed April. Waaaaaaaa!!! Enough… it’s gone… I’ll never get it back. Onward.

Jack is growing fast, smart, funny. Standard poodles are goofs… everything is a big joke! You’re unhappy, because he just made a blizzard out of a newspaper while you were gone… and he’s lying on his back for a tummy rub. They watch and watch… study us, our movements, our routines, our voices and moods. They know us so much better than we know them… and love us without question… and teach us something every day. Jack’s lesson for today: Run around the yard more, lay in the grass, spend time watching the bees on the blueberry bushes, listen to the kids playing next door, close your eyes and listen to the wind… don’t think about anything else! Oh yeah, and share something dead that you found!

My fingers are stuck on the keys of my keyboard… I’m changing type faces and revising files… emailing and uploading digital ones and zeroes into some cloud somewhere… when I should be out looking at real clouds. I need to be exploring and sharing… like Jack. Well, not exactly like Jack… nobody wants to see what Jack shares.

So… here’s my ‘sharing’ part. I’ve been wanting to work with some dark red sculptors wax that I got from a foundry in Boston during a visit about 4 years ago. The foundry pours metal into molds made from the wax figures that artist’s make. The artists use clay and other materials to make sculptures which then are used to make molds. Wax is poured into the mold… then that is used to make a mold that the molten metal will fill. Or… the artist can work directly with the wax to make the figure… and cut out a couple of steps. Great for small pieces. OK, what’s the downside? The dark colored wax is more like a stone to work with!! It’s so hard you can sand it! So, you have to melt it to get it so you can work with it… but not so hot it burns you. I have it melting in a cheap covered saucepan on a buffet hot plate in the studio… and scoop out a little at a time to push and scrape with some makeshift tools I’ve scavenged from around the house. My on-line research has me looking for alcohol torches, lighter fluid and dental tools. More about that later as I learn to make the little rough sketches in wax more refined. The little dogs are about 2.5 inches on the long dimension.

Jack, thanks for the lesson and the inspiration! Now it’s time to go lay in the grass.

my bed

my bed

sit

sit

poodles

poodles

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

The lure of home…

02 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture, Uncategorized

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Tags

airport, Boston, Boston airport, clouds, dramatic sky, evening, flying, home, jetway, Logan International Airport, plane, sunset, terminal, travel

BOS - home again

BOS – home again

An awesome and exhausting three week period of time has ended… where it started… on the runway at Bostons Logan International Airport… an inspiring sunset on the other side of the plane as we landed… but, a lovely shadowed sky post-sunset as we taxied toward the awaiting jet-way. One more march through the endless terminals following the signs toward the dreaded carousels! Home again!

I’m longing to sit at my computer and begin editing multiple files marked “St Martin”, “Washington DC” and “Miami, FL”… (all separate trips from home) a whirlwind of packing and unpacking. Long for sitting in my pj’s and slippers, sipping coffee… a quiet studio in the early morning… the cold floor reminding me that the rumors of summer in New England are just that… rumors. But… no time for that! There’s a new puppy in the house and there are walks to take, puppy training to practice if we want the well-behaved dog we intend to have. A new schedule is in order and we will have to adapt.

It’s home… but a different home than the one we left almost a month ago. An addition to a family does that… but traveling itself does that, too. The world always seems different to me, smaller and bigger at the same time… like seeing the world with different eyes. I’m always anxious to see how it is different after I return home. Each of these recent trips opened a new file on my computer… and in my mind. As the processing proceeds, I hope I find the words to express what I’ve found so far from home… and what I’m managed to bring back home with me.

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Chaos theory

28 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture, Uncategorized

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chaos, cherry blossoms, cherry trees, crowds, festival, people, photography, picture taking, spring, trees, Washington DC

Redbud in the rain

Redbuds in the rain outside the Air & Space Museum – Washington DC

An anticipated trip to Photoshop World in Washington DC this spring had a few unexpected twists… but then, what trip does not? The conference has moved from Boston to Orlando and now to DC… and in perfect time for the early arrival this year of the Cherry Blossoms!! Were there Cherry Blossoms? YES! Are these the blossoms (above)? NO. The famous blossoms were where they always are… around the Tidal Basin near the Thomas Jefferson Memorial… beautiful in all their glory! And… mobbed by what had to be around 300,000 people… all wanting to stand and take their pictures in the very spot that I was standing. A few moments… a few clicks and I fled to find my (nearly invisible to everyone else) dumpster with it’s rusting illusions of desert scenes and chipped paint that looked like turtles or bison depending on your personal vision! The circus of the Tidal Basin and it’s attractions had lost it’s appeal (at least at that time of day!) by the time we waded our way through the picnickers, kite-flyers, cell phone snapping Buddhist monks, men on stilts, port-a-john cleaners, tourists from every country on the planet and maybe one or two other planets… and a pews worth of brides and grooms… and found a DC cab to whisk us away. The next day the rains started and the Air and Space Museum was filled with (I swear!) the exact same crowd at the Tidal Basin… but… they had had additional children by then!!! The number of strollers had increased by a factor of at least 6! The distraction of having a conference was welcome. Perhaps DC is the place to hold this massive download of technical information after all.

 

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Dark moods

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture, Uncategorized

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Tags

clouds, dark clouds, dark mood, islands, Saba, storm, weather

Editing images from a journey to a lovely part of the planet that boasts of being a perpetual summer can’t help but become a ‘one note’ song. The Caribbean light… the ease of breath… the emotionally healing brightness next to deep blue shadows. Even at night the clear sky and lack of city lights reveal our actual place in the cosmos… and it’s dazzling. But, seeing all the images together… sweeping your eyes over the whole of them… you become aware of the few dark notes that are there. A change of mood, here and there. A warning sky the sends the sails tacking for the nearest port… the sudden shower that turns into the darkest of downpours… or waking one morning to face living in the grey/black cloud for a few hours… or a day. Whenever they come upon us, they’re reminders of the real world out there, just beyond our vision… just at the end of the next flight for New York, or Minneapolis… or Seattle.

Soon enough though, we’re distracted by the prevailing bright weather patterns. At home our vacation snapshots transport us into the light. But, here they are in front of me… amid all that brightness… the images that display their dark beauty from my computer screen. The seldom seen island of Saba, usually shrouded in clouds, makes an appearance after a storm. We had looked at this view every day without realizing how close it was… and suddenly there it was. If it looks threatening to you, you’re not the first. Locals tell us that scenes from the King Kong movie were filmed there. I wouldn’t doubt it!

Saba

Saba appears in a dark mood

 

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Hidden hearts

14 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Abstract Macro Photography, Art, Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture, Uncategorized

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Tags

abstract, accidental image, art, arts, grafitti, heart, hearts, hidden picture, Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, St Martin, tile floor

Editing the latest group of photos from St Martin… the hidden hearts have surfaced… some I see at the time the images were captured and some afterwards, viewing the thumbnails of the files in my image processing workflow. I have many of them from everywhere I’ve traveled. There’s a large file of them tucked away amid the files of other various hidden images… (a special catagory of photography close to my heart.) But, for now… here is a small gallery of hidden hearts found on the recent trip… and a few from a trip to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (home town!) that I made recently. They are present everywhere and to find one… all you have to do is… look for them. Try it and let me know what you find…

The crowned heart
The rusted heart
The secret heart

The glass heart
The posted heart
The discarded heart

The true love hearts
Time and Space
The mysterious heart

The wild red heart
Park your dirty little heart right here
The peeling heart

Artful food

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Food, Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture, Uncategorized

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Tags

artful food, culture, food, photography, St Martin, texture, travel, vacation

Eggwhite omlette

Eggwhite omlette

Eggwhite omlette
Eggwhite omlette
The decision
The decision
Baguette French Toast
Baguette French Toast

French loaves
French loaves
Toppings and textures
Toppings and textures
Cafe' aulait and apricot tartan
Cafe’ aulait and apricot tartan

Apple tart tartan
Apple tart tartan
Guilty pleasures
Guilty pleasures
Fresh
Fresh


One cannot live on photographs, editing, uploading, sketching and watercolors alone… so at some point one must prepare or… gather… some food and on the island of St Martin, it is artful indeed. Of course the French boulangeries are the obvious place to find it in its most artful form. In Marigot, Sarafina’s is a favorite just across from the ferry port and outdoor market. Trying to decide what to choose slows the line to a crawl… so better order two of whatever you choose. Even our everyday breakfast fare became something to make special… it only seemed right in the presence of such… artful delights!

 

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Change of air

10 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by Susana Weber in Art, Photography, Travel ~ Photography/Art/Food/Culture

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Tags

art, arts, earth, illustration, landscape, nature, outdoors, painting, photography, plants, sea, Simpson Bay Lagoon, St Martin, travel, vacation, watercolor

Change sunrise

Change sunrise

A definite change… still, warmer, humid, mosquitos! Hearing things you don’t hear when the breeze is running… the dog down the hill… a carpenter cutting wood somewhere far off. Preceded by a night of wind and rain that rattled the shutters, the sunrise sky is like none we’ve seen since we arrived. I’ve amused myself with my watercolor postcards, finding hidden pictures on the tiles of the floor and pool lounging when the sun is not quite so high. I’m getting the hang of the watercolors. I’ve never liked the medium… I’m too impatient and tend to overwork a piece by not letting the color dry before I work on top of it. The breeze here taught me something. It helped dry things up and I could see that I had to wait. Learn something every day… try new stuff… keep those brain cells moving… :)))

Hammock on the porch postcard

Hammock on the porch postcard

 

© Susana Weber and Tattoo Communications, 2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Susana Weber and with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

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