Saturday, January 24, 2015

Attain Appreciation For Natural Beauty When You Experience Modern Art Through Reclaimed Wood

By Janine Hughes


Reclaiming materials from the earth to create useful objects has been a pursuit for ages. People simply used local resources to build the tools and items they needed. In areas where trees were plentiful, the next natural step was to make things attractive. Using the colors and grain became a challenge to the inspired artist, and preserving natural beauty a must. This heritage of craftsmanship is pointedly revived in Chicago, Illinois, where many artisans are using woods reclaimed from many buildings built over one hundred years ago.

An understanding of the craftsmanship that is inherit in using this natural material in a completely new and artistic fashion comes from seeing and touching it. Appreciating modern art through reclaimed wood is a visual and tactile process. It is artists who see the ebb and flow of the lines and desire to use them beautifully. Using natural, stained or painted surfaces in combination with varied textures, many unique installations are created.

Spending some time in local galleries can become the starting point for a love affair with woods. There are local artisans displaying in Chicago who understand the subtle differences in the materials they use, creating lovely furniture and fine pieces of contemporary art. For the buyer, works for sale vary as much as artistic temperament, with many choices available.

These artists are adept at using texture, pattern and color to create exquisite works. With so many variations possible it is not surprising that their art invites human touch as well as visual appreciation. The works intrigue the mind and draw the eye to look at them.

Slices and chips merge to make mosaics filled with movement and rhythm. The high and low of varied sizes creates rugged yet appealing surfaces. Contrasting or complementary stain and paint colors develop thematic units in large pieces. It takes as much time to assemble these as it would to create a traditional tile version, and the final pieces exhibit similar levels of beauty. The skillful eye is able to see pictures in these small units and the hand of the craftsman is skilled to mass them into something much more important as a whole than they were as single bits of material.

It is tempting to assume that all wooden creations will be geometric and angular. But the complexity of these pieces is such that when many pieces are positioned properly they can develop into flowing and even circular designs. What evolves depends completely on the whim of the person working with the tiny parts.

It is possible to harvest any cast off materials to re-purpose into beautiful pieces. Splinters, slivers and dust piles can all be used. What may have been a wall, a floor, or even the remnants remaining after cutting lumber or chopping down trees can have a new life. There is no limit to the ways these carpenter seconds will be transformed into unique new statements.

Harvesting construction discards results in repetitive geometric patterns. These have the unity of machine work. Assembling hundreds together often develops an entirely different wall surface than has been previously seen.

Woods that lived a previous life as a functional item, yet reclaimed to make something new, are satisfying materials for those passionate about recycling. This is art that is mindful of the earth and how to protect the limited resources it has. The rejected and old become valuable modern art.




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