Abnormally Cool Garden Furniture – Helen Nock

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She lives 3,900 miles from here on a different continent, but Helen Nock’s inspired craftsmanship just about ripped my heart out. I have rarely had such an avid appreciation of someone’s excellent work – and make no mistake, there sure are plenty of folks who do amazing things – but Helen’s work had me from the get-go.

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The two bird baths – above and 2 below –  give an idea of her material and her general concepts. She – like me – loves mosaics and the crazy imaginings one can get from colored glass. Yes,  it’s a weakness, I admit it. 😉  I thought the Indians got a great deal selling Manhatten for $22 worth of glass baubles, myself. I’da been cheaper! I am moved by the baubles made by the human hand. Just as the stained glass in the great churches moved men and women to forget their meager and hard-fought existences, witnessing God’s glory and the promise of better lives in those Holy Places – be they Mosque or Temple or the Great Cathedrals of Europe – now, from the hands of fabulous craftsmen and women such as Helen Nock, we get yet another near-religious experience. We are now enabled to witness a shameless exposure to radical artistic design – equally powerful in many ways and definitely as mesmerizing.

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Helen – like the architects of those inspirational devices of churches – also loves experimenting with her own version of killer baubles, enjoying the dimensional frames they fool us with and beguile us with so dearly – and with a playful sense of love at the same time. Art with a smile never looked so good. So? It’s A Garden Fer Pete Sakes!!  Get Real! Sue me! What could be cooler? I’m just a gardener!! These handcrafted products bring ferocious and gorgeous new colors into a garden, all season long – no matter the season. Plus, Helen has a hysterical take on symmetry going for her too – balance is structural, by all means, but hardly designed that way above her very substantial steel footings. I find much of her work positively “Antonio Gaudi-like” and love it. In those times of the year when color is so desperately desired, we have this incredible artifact – or many others shown below by way of tables, seats, bird baths or just standard ornamentation – all glitzy, translucent, shimmering and special and all our own. Man, am I ever a fan!

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Here’s a close up of the picture above – and, yes, please ask about materials…………

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This isn’t some small time girl.This is a serious pursuit and we gain from these gorgeous artworks.

I have no problem whatsoever in comparing what she does with the great artisans of our – or any – era. Art is a trick – we take standard average elements and make them something far, far more than they began with. At my most presumptuous, I think that about my best work. Helen Nock, as many others of us, works hard at her chosen craft. Her products are often commissioned by individuals with very particular wants. Take this Sunflower Table for example:

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A stunning fact of her work is not just in its artistic sensibility alone, either. These items are not your everyday flimsy, department store items. They are made with the connivance and aid from her local blacksmith, as Helen’s demands go to such materials as Stainless Steel, bronze, copper and the slates and stone sets which need a firm footing, attached for super permanence. These are, after all, outdoor products for the most part. They need to accomplish sturdiness and stability facing the greatest conniving for failure devised by man or Diety – children, for one thing, rain and wind and the elements in general, for others – including freezing and thawing. Outside of the Sun, Nature’s most  universal killer of man made things is the alternating temperature during a day’s passage.

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Her “smithy”, Nathan Bennett, is a busy man, and thorough. Not only do they conspire to build these edifices extremely well, they build them to last. And not only do they build them to last, but Helen does these series’ of acid washes of the metals themselves, bringing colors out with each application, fastidiously producing her desired product. She works until she gets it right. I think I like this aspect best, but then I would. The thrill of producing permanent things is a wonderful accomplishment.

Here are her own words as to how she arrived at this craft: (from her website profile)

“I was formally trained in fine art and design with a special interest in painting but a series of unnexpected turns led to my current practice. My professional carreer began working with teenagers and young adults disaffected by mainstream education shortly after gaining my B A Hons as a mature student. A fantastic six years of lecturing and teaching both professionally and personally stretching, but by September 2006, I felt the need to focus my own practice. I assumed a return to painting on a full-time basis but working in a disused stone quarry surrounded by wildlife, some training on the resident blacksmith’s forge and a strong interest in nature and natural materials strongly influenced my decision to make beautiful and unusual things that live outside. The metal working opportunity led to developing work where I could integrate wrought iron, and commission the blacksmith to manufacture from my designs.  Exploring mosaic method seemed a natural progression to combine with wrought iron furniture.  Latterly, I explored the potential of mosaic method for individual sculptural work. I will use a range of methods and material as work and inspiration suggest, not all exclusively mosaic but my abiding interest in mosaic method is fired by it’s flexibility and hardy utility, and diverse possibilities it offers in combinations of media and technique.” Works for me!!  😉 87082_mosaic-and-metal-detail-of-metalwork-surface-finish Here is Helen herself, decked out in her most decadent and oh-so-fashionable working attire and doing those lady-like things we all expect our wimmins to do.  Yes, she is grinding away with a Super Industrial strength grinder. Oh still my heart!!! 😉 That grinder, by the way, is like what we use for shaving cement blocks and bricks. It is about as safe as a loaded gun and needs that much care to avoid accidental disaster – they are, in fact, so powerful, they can also ruin some work in a split second, too. (She’ll kill me for this, I am sure, lol) Hey. I’m in love, don’t listen to those other guys!  😉 4858200074_1a3cce5777_b What we get, from the developer of this art’s perspective, is this – the elemental series of constructions I found incredibly fascinating, to say nothing of the end product: Raw stuff: 4821762119_b1d36ea1b5_b 4821767675_528bbca777_b A forged stainless steel detail: 4832142374_00c716dc84_b The Home Stretch – almost there! 4834696775_780dd45da7_b Still some buffing necessary yet: 4860317729_61ce96bec9_b Final Product: 4864266353_20763149bb_b Pretty amazing stuff. Here is her website:  http://www.helen-nock.co.uk/sculpture–and-wall-art This is where she exhibits just some of her stuff. A word – she also does sculpture and she also does – get this – lighting for gardens, which I show here. This one is entitled “Wall Urchin”: 4287061743_f925380384_o Here it is, lit up: 4287796014_90a45b760b 4287803860_49eeb90a0e_o Helen Nock. My current most favorite artist in the world and also a great gal, I hasten to add. I’ve only spoken with her by mail, asking her permission to spread the Great Word and we definitely made one another laugh. There can be no higher praise. Thanks, Helen and keep it up!! She does a great Pig, by the way!! And in a shirt, no less, for the more modest of us.

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180417_andamento-flow Absolutely wonderful work. 65570_cluster 3894054799_b3ae17dda3_b 87286_garden-table-spira-top-view-scroll-down-for-more-views 139860_garden-table-shingle-dreaming 3894835854_3d8d64e1c6_o 3894048341_e75921d290_o

Tattoo You

Me, get a tattoo? No thanks. I hasten to admit I have considered it and I also admit my daughter has a couple she had placed in spots where her parents wouldn’t be able to easily see. There are – having said all that – some incredibly artistic tattoos which have moved me to severe appreciation, but, alas, the line I stand in is among one of the longer and less adventurous body art applicants.

But my nephew Aaron Campbell is every single bit of “world class” at putting tattoos on people –  he has become a very sought-after tattoo artist. The work he does is frankly magnificent and I am utterly amazed and proud at what he has accomplished and what he will accomplish. I will stud this post with various pictures of his work – or of him – and proceed down a lane of appreciating body art from a safe and unblemished – scars and terrible tone of the author notwithstanding – distance. 😉

Affable, sometimes goofy, Aaron is what we call a free spirit with his own timeline. He is also a loving family member who calls his Grandma often and who thinks about his family members all the time. In that sense, he is totally reliable and as conservative as he can be. His heart is pretty golden, is what I’m saying.

181150_330201093736153_1041346693_nAaron got his incredible artistic talents from the combination of my sister – his Mom – Diane, who has always dabbled with visual arts from her very origins, fascinated with color and context, having done much painting in her earlier days. Aaron’s father is a truly gifted musician, Gary Campbell, who even still tours in Europe occasionally playing his saxophone with the quite celebrated Miroslav Vitous – the original bassist and founding member of Weather Report – or hooking up with local bands near Miami for hot Cubano jazz gigs. Gary teaches Jazz Music at Florida International University.

246731_422736751120732_746714460_nI can remember visiting Diane and Gary in New York City and catching the local vibe which was insanely musical during a period of time when outrageously interesting music was being made, often privately and in back rooms and local studios including guys like Jimi Hendrix and members of the eventual Miles Davis clan of world-class all stars. Of course, Aaron was just a pup back then, but an incredibly entertaining little 3 year old who loved, loved loved the subways and what he called “the laughing cars”. He would scream with delight when they got underway. (So, see, he has always been easy to please. 😉  )

1095042_10202758354310255_627695911_nAaron’s childhood was somewhat restless following his Mom and Dad’s divorce, but they made sure he was loved, like many similarly-challenged parents do, yours truly included. I remember his earliest drawings were the massive spectacles of dinosaurs wrestling, in battle or simply relaxing, but the dinosaur theme was always just humongous and absolutely predictable. My sister’s wan, ironic looks when he would craft yet another dinosaur epic were often hilarious. But they were also always very good, Which is the point. He was “artistically inclined”, which is like saying “Water is wet.”

He was sort of on fire.

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No, that’s not him, but he’ll appreciate it. It’s a cheap thrill, much like this meme:

🙂

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So onwards and upwards!1520778_632443976816674_1694884396_nUpon graduation from high school Aaron had applied for and been accepted into the Kubert School (link by clicking), an amazingly creative group who teach a world class level of cartooning and animation/graphics and whose alumni are everywhere from Wolverine and Disney to my favorite: Sponge Bob Square Pants. This gave him his more disciplined approach to such a personalized artistic demand as tattooing real live, extremely critical human people.

7ef80c1ecfa85bf204438ea281b72bdcMuch of Aaron’s apprenticeship was achieved in Tuscon, Arizona under a very-tattooed fellow, a crusty but benevolent older man who took Aaron under his wing and let him learn the basics. Essentially, very similar to my own experiences in landscaping – and a point Aaron and I have mutually appreciated in our own hands-on style of apprenticeship – he began to get better. The move to Missoula, Montana and the not-so-fatal attraction of his bride, Alex Baker, 😉 – one of my favorite people ever – finished off a process of apprenticeship to a point where Aaron could most certainly qualify as a Professional. (Actually, an awful lot like his Uncle Steve, his best work is unrecorded, not filmed or shot but merely done and now appreciated by now-remote clients.) But a lot does remain and he is still active as heck.

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Motherboard ahead!

1795700_673666539361084_1379587760_nOctopus fans?

a1dceea333e9aac7b36ea746642b0944I adore his color work most, I think, but his art is far from ‘merely colorful’. His detail work is probably what makes him stand out so brilliantly, small brilliant achievements which show up in profound and sustained excellence. Often understated, he can make a foggy realism or deliver a Pointillist’s Dream.

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Getting the picture?

Aaron’s work consistently blows me away.

download (6)Imaginative and in perfect line with the most Progressive Era of Skin Art in our history, Aaron is at the cutting edge. Even I know this.165494_4606505210731_636354709_nHe can also do “purely simple”. And make that work too.

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And “excessively cute!!”  Ha ha

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Tasty and simply gorgeous.14536_193836433538_8119869_n

My current favorite in progress:

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Not bad, stud.

 

Kentucky’s “State Tree” – Liriodendron Tulipifera

This gorgeous and stately beauty stands as one of the most overlooked and under valued trees it has been my pleasure to ignore for long years. The “Tulip Tree” was not ignored by everyone, however. It is officially Kentucky’s State Tree and I now proclaim to all the world, I buy fully into it.

(enlarge pictures by left-clicking)

DSCN2257[1]The problem with the lack of Paparazzi lies in its muted effect. I mean, who the heck ever cared much about green blooms?

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Interestingly, the color of the blooms often goes through a fairly rapid transformation with about a 2 week window, trading off various oddly-timed blooms for newer ones in a fit of profuseness and then it’s back to the business of being a stately, elegant, extremely fast-growing and often very tall tree.

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Shapely, even stately when allowed to thrive without conflicting tall trees, this softwood Poplar variation is as charming and – ironically, owing to its subtle colors – as demurely elegant as it gets.

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And did we add? – Profuse!

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This plant is a ridiculously beautiful specimen. Like so many local surprises, Kentucky’s beauty – often regaled and rightfully so – can often lie in its rich legacy of incredibly diverse and gorgeous trees.

 

DSCN2268[1]I’m a fan!

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