Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Thursday, December 13, 2012

GETTING TRASHY

By Claire DeWan, ASID Allied, Eco Committee Board member
KW Designs

As current trends shift toward environmentally-friendly, many products are marketed to showcase their low impact on landfills post-use. But how many products can take this a step further and turn actual trash into treasure? But wait- I’m not talking dumpster diving! Here are a few new high-end, innovative products that bring new meaning to ‘waste’!

Giovanni Barbieri takes a backwards approach with a new collection for his handcrafted Italian tile line, which are created from the dust of travertine and marble cutting. Through a laboratory process, Barbieri creates beautiful 3D hexagon reliefs, suitable for both indoors and out.
 
Pictured below, from the Engineered Marble Carved Tiles collection, more styles created from marble dust. Appropriate for indoors and out, with the exception of extreme weather conditions.
All tiles available through www.giovannibarbieri.com.

GREENTASTIC
This year 3Form released ‘100%,’ a new collection of countertop material made entirely from post-consumer recycled HDPE. HDPE- (something I had to look up the definition for), “high-density polyethylene,” is a polyethylene thermaplastic made from petroleum. Phew! No wonder I majored in Art! The breakdown is that the product is made entirely of post-consumer plastic. Hooray! Visit www.3-form.com for more information.
 
 
Less plastic in landfills and the ocean leads to a happier Earth. I’d love to share this video that I watched earlier this year that highly affected my view on our ‘throwaway’ culture.
 
 
Sometimes even recycling isn’t enough… but it’s better than nothing! So let’s keep with using those smart, earth-friendly products as much as we can!

Friday, May 6, 2011

Sourcing Eco-Friendly Artwork

by Barbara Markoff, co-owner of Artrageous!
ASID Industry Partner

As design professionals, we all understand the significance of selecting and placing inspiring artwork in residential and commercial spaces. Artwork is usually added toward the end of a design plan once all of the furniture, wall treatments, flooring and other design elements have been completed. The art offerings in today’s market are rapidly changing, and green design has instilled a new direction for many artists. A newfound consciousness has led artists to shed materials that were seen as harmful to the environment and replace them with eco-friendly materials.

Interior designers and art consultants are placing works of art in environments that are not only visually exciting, but are 100% green. Art buyers are interested in finding artists who create eco-friendly artwork. Some artists are consciously using biodegradable and natural materials such as clay, wood, bamboo, kieri board, and fiber. Three such artists are Kelly Jean Ohl (clay artist), Polly Jacobs Giacchina (fiber artist) and Steven Florman (wood sculpture artist).

Clay: Minnesota clay artist Kelly Jean Ohl creates a series of organic shapes reminiscent of biological entities by rolling clay into textural surfaces and forming cylindrical pieces hung in a grouping. She also creates smaller organic pieces that remind the viewer of something found in a tide pool or discovered while walking in a forest. Each clay piece is hand carved, burnished, sanded, and fired multiple times.
Grouping of installation pieces commissioned for a residential client commissioned through Artrageous!
Wood: Local artist and architect Steven Florman reclaims wood on the way to the dumpster or finds wood from trees and bushes to create his wood sculptures. Often he uses scrap wood in combination with recycled metal. The glue Steven uses is Tightbond, an environmentally safe and solvent-free construction adhesive.
Circular wood wall sculpture commissioned through Artrageous! installed at Kaiser Permanente Medical Office Building, Mission Viejo, CA
Fiber: Local San Diego artist, Polly Jacobs Giacchina, uses the flowering part of local date palms as the primary material in her weavings. From very large date palms, Polly trims the stalks with the tendrils intact. She then soaks the tendrils in water, making them pliable and ready to weave into patterns. Once dried, the woven tendrils retain a stiff form that is rich in earth tones. For added color, the artist weaves in original painted canvas strips in a linear fashion using the same twining basketry technique.
Fiber wall piece commissioned through Artrageous! for Kaiser Permanente Medical Office Building, Vista, CA
Artrageous!, an art and framing company based in San Diego, has demonstrated a deliberate effort to seek and represent regional and national artists who are creating beautiful, handcrafted pieces in a variety of media that utilize earthy and sustainable materials.

For more information, call Artrageous! at (858)-452-7280, visit Barbara’s website at http://www.theartconsultant.biz/ or email her at bmarkoff@mac.com. Barbara is a corporate art consultant in San Diego and author of the book Becoming a Corporate Art Consultant, The Handbook for Corporate Art Consultation (available at Amazon.com).

Sunday, March 14, 2010

The Color of Art is "Green"

Sharon Burns ASID, CID
Art Consultants + Design
ASID Eco Committe Member

As Designers, let’s think about selecting “green art” in our next projects. You know I’m not talking about the color green (although colors of green are beautiful as well), but sustainable art! There are so many creative ways to bring eco-friendly art into your client’s home or business….just think outside of the toxic landfill box! Here are some helpful suggestions:

• When working with your framer, ask to use acid-free adhesives & glues. Ask if or request that they recycle glass, matboard, and moldings.

• Select frame moldings that are manufactured with earth-friendly practices such as Nurre Caxton’s EcoCare-Blackwood at http://www.nurrecaxton.com/ which uses water-based stains. Almost all frame molding companies have sustainable frames to select from.

• Specify matboards that are 100% renewable rag cotton or recycled fiber.

• Choose graphic artists and printmakers that are developing and using non-toxic, non-polluting new methods that are safer and healthier.

• Select artists who use scrap metal and discarded industrial waste or ordinary junk to design creative new forms of art; the results are stunning to say the least!

• Choose enamellers and ceramic artists using non-toxic and sustainable methods & pigments.

• Select tapestry and fiber art makers who use natural fibers and ecological themes, or other artists who create installations of environmental interest.

• Choose painters and sculptors who use organic, natural, sustainable, recycled materials, digital methods, and no chemical solvents.

• Seek out crafts-artists working with natural and organic materials.

• Specify photography exploring the natural and social environment.

• To light your art, select warm white LED picture lights such as those found at House of Troy http://www.houseoftroy.com/
Enjoy working with the thought of providing ‘green’ art. Do something artistically innovative to help our big blue planet!

For more information, please contact:

Sharon Burns ASID, CID
Art Consultants + Design
http://www.artconsultantsdesign.com/
5580 La Jolla Blvd. #428
La Jolla, CA 92037