"Volatile": watercolor, pastels. |
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From maple burl, cherry, and ash, Oliver Chalk’s voluminous vessels highlight natural textures while emphasizing alluring patterns and geometry. The Kent-based artist (previously) finds chunks of timber in the countryside around his home, homing in on pieces of trees that have partly decayed, been cut by arborists, or were felled by storms.
Simultaneously delicate and sturdy, each piece highlights both its material and the artist’s meticulous technique. Striations, facets, pits, and ridges define Chalk’s spherical forms, framing elegant openings. And so-called flaws, like holes or knots, emerge as focal points in the hand-chiseled, lathe-turned vessels, providing unique character.
In 2023, Chalk received a scholarship from the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust to support research and production of bronze sculptures based on his wooden pieces. Translating the porous, malleable material into solid bronze, the artist focused on the characteristics of the surface through the patination process. He buried five of the six cast pieces for periods of 100, 150, or 200 days, allowing natural compounds to work away at the metal and produce distinctive markings.
2 comments:
Jacki, these vessels (and also the photographs!) are fabulous. Such elegance and perfection.
It's so inspiring and encouraging to read that people can achieve things even when they seem to be already too old for them. Congratulations to Zhiying Zeng!
I just watched a video showing SIMONE BILES winning the gold medal in gymnastics. Jacki, I think you had her on your blog some years ago when she could not finish the competition. And now: gold! She was so good!
Thank you, Elenor. Yes, It seems as look back and even now, things do work out if we have the patience to wait and survive? Hope so anyway.
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