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Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 June 2013

out of the fire....

Henrique Oliveira. Dead Fire (detail). Burned plywood. 2012


















Out of the fire the wood escapes, scorched but not consumed. Coiling and twisting like a nest of massive snakes, of blind basilisks. Rejecting its fate. Rebellious.


Henrique Oliveira. Dead Fire.

Henrique Oliveira. Dead Fire (detail).










































While a few years earlier, a fireplace leaks a dark puddle (blue sky reflecting on the surface of the deep). Flames quenched.

Out of the fire, water.


Kate MccGwire. Slick. Mixed media with magpie feathers. 2010






















See more about Kate MccGwire in the following posts: holy waters; collecting as art practice; and the luminescence of the night sky.







Sunday, 10 February 2013

burning man

Peter von Tiesenhausen. Revelation (detail). 2000. Burned and carved plywood.







































The fire that animates also consumes.


Peter von Tiesenhausen. Revelation (detail). 2000.
Burned and carved plywood.



















For more posts about Peter von Tiesenhausen, click here,  or here, or here.






singed











































You approach a volcanic pile of wood assembled for the night’s fire works. A work of fire.

The pyre is lit. The blaze begins; ravenously licking, crackling, snapping. 

As the initial energy is spent, you notice it: a lightless figure in the midst of the light. A black hole within the sun. Its pull is magnetic; gravitational. The shadow of a man, the darkness that fuels the fire. Charred, but not yet consumed. A human sacrifice, slowly smouldering.

For weeks, neither you nor the others who were there can think of anything else. Singed, none of you can make anything that does not contain fire. This fire.


In May 2007, visual artist Peter von Tiesenhausen hosted the artists and
mentors of Prairie North Creative Residency at his home in
Demmit, Alberta. After dinner and a tour of his land, on which
much of his most important work was completed and remains,
he lit a bonfire. Out of the fire emerged a figure, in the
tradition of his Watchers series. A self-portrait, burning
as if in effigy. Or perhaps rising from the flames like a phoenix.
Photos by Wendy Stefansson.

























To see more of Peter von Tiesenhausen's work, go to http://www.tiesenhausen.net. Or click on any of the following links to posts on this blog: burning man; a book of days; or approaches.