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My Comments


VIEWING 1 - 8 OUT OF 10 COMMENTS

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From: gerebear
07/02/2008 14:02:05
"Orvus Knows" is excellent, great work.


From: sketch
05/29/2008 15:14:54
Enjoyed Sakura most. Thanks for sharing!


From: sputnik
05/25/2008 11:28:16

thanks for coming yesterday and bringing your lovely family. Sorry it was so hectic.  I don't get a lot of time with any one person when there are 70 or so here.


Sharman



From: karenzima
05/24/2008 01:19:28

Hi There!  I just posted that.  Thanks for being the first to coment on it.  I sort of have a story behind all my work.  LOL!


   thanks for the compliment.   Karen



From: JohnRo
05/19/2008 21:03:50

AWESOME!


 



From: wmprice
05/13/2008 15:23:19
Nice work, can't wait to see more


From: LeslieJean
05/12/2008 12:50:36

About the Oriental aesthetic....It comes through really clearly to me in your work; the flat picture plane is very reminiscent of oriental block prints - like those that influenced Toulouze-Lautrec; your choice of subject matter - very quiet and contemplative. The blossoming tree (cherry blossoms, perhaps?) is a very frequent subject in oriental art; The simplicity of your images - as simple, yet profound, as a haiku poem. You seem to have a real concern for the "formal" aspects of your work - and that is very much what I see in oriental work. (I'm referring to traditional oriental work - like the block prints. I'm not real familiar with contemporary oriental painting. Althoug, that would make for interesting research!)


Anyway, its fun that you didn't let on about your heritage, and that it came through. I'm wondering if you were exposed to a lot of oriental art growing up, and so you just sort of assimilated the aesthetic? Interesting food for thought for you.


--LeslieJean



From: LeslieJean
05/03/2008 14:15:29

HI! You inquired about my piece, Cocoon. The "rocks/eggs" are ceramic - thrown on the wheel but closed up, paddled and smoke fired. The rest is sticks, rafia, copper wire, and found Canadian Goose down (for the nest).While the main part is about 4' tall, not counting the distance from the floor. It's meant to be encountered at a human scale when hung. Thanks for visiting my site. I'm still adding a few more images, so visit again soon.


While here, I took a look at your gallery...you seem to have a very oriental aesthetic. Very nice use of colors in Birch.





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