Saturday, October 9, 2010

Arrow piece nearly done



This aluminum piece is nearly finished - I've just got to construct a proper base for it. Even with a piece of granite mounted in the bottom, the footprint is too small for safety and a medium wind would blow it over. The dimensions of the arrow are: 61" H x 13.25" W x 4" D. It is all aluminum held together by 200 galvanized steel screws. Like previous pieces of this type, it is painted, roughed up with coarse steel wool and clear coated. Next up: finish the two stones that are waiting . . .

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Oops!


Well, here's some useful knowledge. I used to work with 2-component urethane foam, and although it achieved 30 times it's original volume, the action was all over in less than 5 or 10 minutes. I'm here to tell you the insulating foam you can buy in a can is different stuff! I foamed the interior of my aluminum piece pictured above because the seams were starting to separate. I thought that the foam would adhere to the aluminum and hold the piece together without my having to add screws or rivets. I knew there was going to be trouble after a couple of hours because the stuff was still increasing in volume - I should have scooped it out then. By this morning - well, you can see in the right photo that it spent much of the night getting bigger and bigger. It has stopped now, but it pushed out the sides and separated a couple of the seams so the piece will never be right again.
Guess I should have done a bit of testing . . .

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

New aluminum piece


I realized it's been a while since my last post when it was time to go pick up my alabaster piece because the 64 ARTS Exhibition had ended! That was the subject of my last post, which made me think of the maxim: Time flies like an arrow – fruit flies like a banana. Speaking of arrows, they were the subject of several pieces of mine in school - long ago - and my newest aluminum piece revisits that symbol. In the photo above, it is up on a table where the dogs couldn't knock it over while I photographed it. When finished, it'll feature a weighted base that will enable it to stand upright without visible support. It will weigh 5 lbs. or less, but the internal weight will be about 10-12 lbs., making it quite stable. This will also be painted and abraded, like my other recent metal works.

Monday, September 6, 2010

New metal piece is finished


I decided to paint the wall piece with a red oxide primer. Then, after roughing up the surface with really coarse steel wool, I applied a final coat of clear, satin-finish enamel. As I said in a previous post, this is a test piece and I used really thin-gauge aluminum, but I feel that it is a success and a good starting point for a larger piece with heavier metal. This piece, titled "Red Wall", is 12" high by 38" long and weighs just over 3 lbs. – very light, but very rigid as well.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Ready for paint . . . umm, maybe not . . .



I finished this metal piece yesterday and am now faced with the question, "Is it done, or not?". This usually does not surface in my work, but this piece is made of such thin aluminum that the surface is somewhat distorted by some of the screws, and I also dented it in a few places during its construction. I'm either going to have to rough it up overall - a prospect I don't find too appealing, or I'll paint it and then abrade edges, screws, etc. with coarse steel wool in the manner of my piece "Armored Low Rhombo" from two or three months ago. Most likely, I'll paint it. After that is done, I'll post a final photo. Then, I've got to get back to the stones I was working on before I got the idea for this piece.

On another topic, I was pleased to receive the "Best of Show" award last evening at the "64 Arts" Exhibition at the Buchanan Center in Monmouth, IL. The winning piece was the alabaster "Sound of Ice", the same piece that won the grand award at the Galex Exhibition here in Galesburg a little over a year ago. It is shown above.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

What I did on summer vacation



Seriously, there is no summer vacation - this is what I got done this weekend. Lori and I both had a rather amazing creative spurt this weekend so we hit it pretty hard. I did the limestone piece in about 2 hours and I think it's a seminal piece. It's only about
6" in it's largest dimension, but I just had to sketch this out. Already, the next iteration is forming in my mind. The aluminum piece is one I started last week, but only barely. It also represents a new technique that holds great promise. I've been looking for a way to make medium-sized pieces from aluminum and have them be light in weight, yet rigid enough to hold their shape. This is the first of that type and the structural elements do just what I expected and hoped. It is about 38" long but I think I can use this method to make structurally sound pieces two to three times this size. I used inexpensive aluminum that is quite thin because I was unsure about the outcome and didn't want to use the good stuff, but I will on the next piece. This one will probably be painted and roughed up a bit.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Working inside


We are having some new windows installed in our home so due to traffic through my outside studio, I've moved my two current stones to my inside one. This also gets me cool for a while which coincides with the hottest weather we've yet had. Another advantage is that my metal studio is right outside the stone-working area and I've got a couple of metal pieces in the works too. Above are a few photos of the most recent piece, currently known as "Solid Geometry #6". As you can see, I've started the refinement phase, to be followed soon by finishing.