Art

Ovum d’Aphrodite

May 8, 2011

A sculpture about the birth of Aphrodite when “she” was a fertilized egg in the womb of a scallop shell.

For more information on Ovum d’Aphrodite see links below.
Ovum d’Aphrodite
Birth marks
1st of two births

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Sculptures made in response to a government campaign to equate refugees with criminals.

For more information follow these links:

Continuing our journeys
Who’s On Board?

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Ovum d’Aphrodite

April 11, 2011

As an artist, if I were to have a “mission statement”, it is to bring an awareness of eros, of love and beauty, feeling and intuition, mystery and passion back into our overly masculine perception of the world.

Empowering the feminine.

Two weeks ago I quoted from a poem by M.C. Richards – “Aphrodite lifts her foaming mouth to the beach and steps from her shell” — and went on to describe how the symbolic meaning of the sea shell, as found in most paintings of the birth of the Greek Aphrodite or Roman Venus, is that it represents the vulva; the external organ of generation in the female.

Richards also uses the word “foaming”. And this comes from the etymology of Aphrodite herself which means “rising foam”. (In Greek, sea foam is called ‘aphros.’) The below painting by Ingres shows Aphrodite surrounded by sea foam.

Most interesting, however, is that the story of her birth all started when Cronus, the youngest son of the Earth goddess Gaia, castrated his father Uranus with a sickle and tossed the genitals into the ocean (or, we could say, back into the feminine waters of Gaia). The sea foam that resulted from this potent mix of male and female energies gave rise to Aphrodite, the goddess of fertility, love and beauty.

All the above is by way of introducing the reader to the finished sculpture I first wrote about in my blog entry of November 29 when it was first being carved.

Four and a half months later, ‘Ovum d’Aphrodite’ is finished.

The finished piece is about the size that the fully mature Aphrodite would have stepped from. But this sculpture nestles Aphrodite — as a fertilized egg – into a stylized womb that itself is nestled into a scallop shell.

Within the inner sanctum of the vulva, the egg of the soon to be born Aphrodite is placed into a chalice that is comprised of two crescent shaped moons/boats that join to create the pointed oval vesica piscis that is often painted as an aureole around the Virgin Mary’s head.

Seen from behind, the sculpture’s labia exude a more visceral, muscled quality.

Seen from the front, the stylized labia can take on the appearance of a fur coat surrounding a neck or head. The question has to then be asked: Are the full lapel collars used in fashion an unconscious representation of the vulva?

Can we start to speak more honestly about the presence of the feminine, hidden or otherwise, in our world?

I guess I just want to say that these old stories, although much forgotten, are still a part of us. They need to be re-membered, made alive once again through the artist’s eyes, hands and heart and given a new life; a new birth, so to speak.

And before any reader starts thinking that I’m just a wimpy SNAG (sensitive new age guy), think again. Aphrodite’s immense, overpowering beauty and her ability to love with deep passion was the result of the union of the masculine (sky god Uranus) and the feminine (earth goddess Gaia).

In nature as in most things, it takes two to tangle/tango.

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A weekend Tribe

March 21, 2011

Four beautiful people.

Myself, painter Jerzy Michalski, print-maker Mandy Renard and Douglas Webster (Windgrove writer-in-residence)

We came together this past weekend for a serious and convivial, light-hearted and deeply intellectual probing of Sufi and similarly inspired spiritual/earth based poetry. Our focused intent was to discuss how poetry influenced and directed each of us in our work as artists, in our personal relationships, and, in our development of self.

We read aloud to each other passages from Rumi, Hafiz, Zbigniew Herbert, Billy Collins, Kabir, Kahlil Gibran and Bibi Hayati as well as several poems from fellow participant Douglas.

We prepared and served each other food and drink, sweet and savory delicacies, love, wonderment and hugh admiration.

We walked the property and marveled as one at the flux and interplay of the sacred and profane.

This small gathering of like-minded artists was also very important as it was the first gathering of people at Windgrove with a set agenda for several years and, therefore, marked the beginning of the re-emergence of Windgrove as a refuge for learning. The intention is to continue on with small workshops and retreats that deal with the fusion of spirit, art and ecology.

Along with Windgrove, once again, becoming a place for group retreats, the arrival two weeks ago of long time friend and colleague Douglas Webster for a month long stay announced the re-start of the residency program.

The photo shows the recently re-modeled and re-furnished sleeping and working area for the visiting Windgrove resident. Small and compact, but warm, friendly and conducive to creative work.

There are now two living spaces for residents that are relatively private and separated from the main house. I am trying to summon up the energy to proceed with the creation of a third resident house.

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Sand Mandala

March 15, 2011

An ephemeral sculpture done at Friendly Beaches on the east coast of Tasmania.

For more information on Sand Mandala see links below:
An Artist’s Life – 4
An Artist’s Life – 3

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Sculptures based on the sea grass King Neptune’s Necklace.

For further information on Buddha Beads see links below.
The Model
Slow as
Slow as #2
A peek into four months of an artist’s life

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