Tag: Katja Fritzsche

  • Insert the Artsy: Color Three Way

    Insert the Artsy: Color Three Way

    There’s a school of thought that white walls = boring.  But white walls + wooden textures + pops of colorful artwork?  Anything but!!  And this Artsy is here to prove it to ya.  Let’s take a beautiful, airy space like the one below.  The white surfaces have already been warmed a bit by pops of cozy wood textures.  The way the light bounces off those walls make this the perfect place for some color.  And that beautifully curved staircase wall?  It’s just crying out for a fabulous wall sculpture or installation.  Don’t believe me?  Let us count the ways..

    There are lots of different ways you could take the artwork in this space– those white walls are the perfect blank canvas!

    1 | happy texture Smooth surfaces abound in this space, which leaves ample room for adding pattern and texture.  A Liz Tran sculptural installation is like a party on a wall, providing an instant shot of joyful movement.  Or how about gettin’ a little groovy with a retro-ish weaving?  Tanya Aguiniga‘s Multi Knot Wall Hanging is a bit more minimalistic, but still adds just the right amount of texture and color.  Making a simple, bold statement is hardly ever the wrong choice and one of Jen Pack‘s fabric & wood wall sculptures packs just the right amount of punch.

    ITA_Jan_happy texture collage

     images found here here here and here

    2 | organic elegance Not only can a space like this handle something dynamic and full of color but a single elegant representational sculpture can add just the right amount of elegance to bring the slightly casual atmosphere up a notch.

    ITA_Jan_organic elegance collage

    images found here here here and here

    3 | slick pop Interesting juxtapositions your game?  Graphic, pop inspired pieces provide an intriguing touch of je ne sai quois when paired with these white walls and warm textures. Think of the neon signs, sand and palm trees of Miami– opposites never looked so good together.

    ITA_Jan_Slick pop collage

    images found here here here and here

    Have I convinced you yet?  Are you running out to buy gallons and gallons of white paint? 😉  See more of my favorite artsy interiors on my Artsy Dwelling Pinterest board.  Oh and like what I put together here?  I can do it for you, too!

    All image sources linked above.

  • The Elegant Wild: Katja Fritzsche

    The Elegant Wild: Katja Fritzsche

    Did you have a favorite animal growing up?  One that you loved, identified with, family members bought you t-shirts & stuffed animals in their likeness?  Isn’t it interesting how we, as young children, identify with our fellow members of the animal kingdom, then as with most of the magic of childhood, we outgrow our connection to our spirit creatures.  The work of Tuscon artist Katja Fritzsche reminds us that those connections we once felt are not gone forever, only buried for a time.

    Blue Sky Ram by Katja Fritzsche
    Blue Sky Ram, reverse painted mosaic and hand cast glass, 30x20x22

    By casting her creatures in the glass with perceived rigidity and coldness, Fritzsche’s work serves to recall to us that though we overlook our fellow animals, destroying their habitats as we build our own glass and steel monuments, they are still among us.  We catch glimpses of them in unexpected places, a lost deer wandering a suburban neighborhood, a hawk perched high atop a skyscraper.

    Edge by Katja Fritzsche
    Edge, blown glass and hand worked bronze
    Migration by Katja Fritzsche
    Migration, cast glass and hand forged bronze, 18x10x10
    Mapplethorpe by Katja Fritzsche
    Mapplethorpe, mosaic glass and hand worked glass, 30x21x10

    As we amble clumsily through life, the animals live each day with instinct, grace, and purpose.  Each born to his own calling and knowing it from birth.  How have we strayed so far from our own guiding spirits?

    Violet by Katja Fritzsche
    Violet, blown glass, mosaic glass and pressed flowers, 24x15x22

    To see more of Katja Fritzsche’s work, please visit her website.  I went through a pretty serious manatee phase when I was young– such gentle, unassuming animals, while Mr. Forager has always had a fascination with wolves. What creature did/do you identify with?  Has it changed over the years?

    All images are via the artist’s website.  Artist found via Visions West Gallery.