Tag: consumerism

  • Cardboard Beauty: Cristobal Valecillos

    Cardboard Beauty: Cristobal Valecillos

    It is a special gift bestowed upon artists to take what is ugly and make it beautiful.  In his Recycle series, photographer Cristobal Valecillos uses every day materials to craft the fashions and sets he then photographs, so that what is often never looked twice upon becomes elevated to extraordinary.

    Tea Time by Cristobal Valecillos
    Tea Time, archival digital print on metallic paper on plexiglass, 26×36

    Every single thing but the models in each set is carefully crafted from pizza boxes, Starbucks sleeves, newspapers, etc., giving each design incredible texture and depth.  The fashions seem to fit the models as well as any couture, and the drama of what seems to be unfolding in the expanded scenes lends those pieces in particular a wonderfully theatrical quality.

    Doubt by Cristobal Valecillos
    Doubt, archival digital print on metallic paper on plexiglass, 53×35
    Olga by Cristobal Valecillos
    Olga, archival digital print on metallic paper on plexiglass, 60×36
    Untitled by Cristobal Valecillos
    Untitled, archival digital print on metallic paper on plexiglass, 60×36

    I spotted Valecillos’ work several times at the LA Art Show and the photographs, mounted on plexiglass are sleek and beautiful in person.  However, it was the artist’s cardboard sculptures and set installation that really stayed with me.  A reminder that every thing around us is temporary and fleeting, every chair we covet and save for, every piece of art hanging on our walls, every item of clothing carefully chosen.

    Organic A by Cristobal Valecillos
    Organic A, archival digital print on metallic paper on plexiglass, 24×36

    In his artist statement, Valecillos alludes to the creation of beauty from waste, using recycling to inspire art.  For me, I see in his work more of a statement upon the artificiality and ephemeral nature of the world we find ourselves in.  What do you see?

    To see more of Cristobal Valecillos’ work, please visit his website.

    All images are via the website of the artist’s representing gallery, The McLoughlin Gallery.

  • Melting Messages: Nicole Dextras

    Melting Messages: Nicole Dextras

    While Mr. Forager & I are on the road, making our way to California, we’re rerunning Artsy Forager’s most popular posts.  This post originally published on December 21, 2011 and an Etsy Facebook post feature made it go just a little viral.  Enjoy!

    This Florida girl is pretty new to the powdery white stuff.   If you live anywhere with snow, you know, as I am now finding out, that the fluffy white sugar transforms and quiets all around it.  But it is a fleeting beauty, only lasting a few months before turning to slush and ushering in the newness of spring.  And with the environmental changes taking place and urban sprawl snowballing ( pun intended ), the time and places to enjoy unspoiled beauty is diminishing quickly.  The vulnerability of the landscape under the threat of commerce is the underlying theme of Vancouver, BC artist Nicole Dextras’ Ice Typography installations.

    View, 6 foot ice letters on the shore of Lake Ontario on Toronto Island during an art residency at the Gibraltar Art Center in 2007.

    Her installations of words against backdrops of natural and urban landscapes begin with wood forms which are filled with water and left to freeze.  Once frozen, the forms are removed, leaving behind only the ice, which as we all know from Frosty’s story, only lasts for a little while.

    Resource, Ice text installed on Lake Nipissing during the Ice Follies exhibition hosted by the WKP Kennedy Gallery in North Bay, Ontario in 2008.

    These installations are indeed powerful when whole, but it is once the ice begins to melt, or is blown over by wintery winds that their real potency comes through..

    Resource ( melting ), Ice installation lasted 4 weeks. ( photo by http://www.lizlott.com/ )

    Equally compelling is the juxtaposition of words and phrases against their natural or urban backdrops..

    In Flux, created during an Art Residency at the Banff Art Center in Alberta in the winter of 2005.
    Desire, Night shot with the city lights glowing in the background.
    Consume, Ice text in the front of the ever expanding Coal Harbor real-estate boom.

    To see more of Nicole Dextras’ poignant installations, please visit her website.  During this season of incredible beauty and rampant consumerism, perhaps take a walk in the woods instead of heading to the mall.  It will be good for your soul.

    Featured image is Legacy, a shot of the plywood forms installed on the frozen Yukon River.  All images are via the artist’s website.