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Group Exhibition 2017

    Thornhill Foundation for the Arts artLAB

I labeled this as a group exhibition because the event was a huge collaborative effort.

The members of the board of directors for TFA, which included myself, created and organized the event.

 

We collaborated with Ybor City and multiple other non-profit organizations, local artists, and local businesses.

 

Centennial Park, Ybor City, FL.

 

I displayed my sculptures for sale at the event and sold all of them in a $1.00 per ticket raffle.

artLAB Benefit Series

 
For this series I used some of the smaller scale sculptures from my 2016 Series and expounded the craft, design and process of my work.
 
I incorporated more advanced wire techniques, a wider variety of materials, and began incorporating paint to my work.
These pieces were then promoted and displayed at TFA's live painting competition and art festival artLAB. Tickets were purchased at the event and buyers had to wait until the end of the event to hear if they had won. I pulled tickets from large envelopes and read the winners with the ticket number into the microphone.
 
Winners had to take their sculptures home with them that day.

Official documentation photos taken of sculptural forms presented during the first annual artLAB

 

Photos and photographic concept by Jorge Cainas

A Growing Wonder
2014-2017
(Sold)
 
12 ga copper wire, 8 ga copper wire, 6 ga copper wire, acrylic paint, amethyst heat-treated, Apache Tears obsidian, concrete, copper tubing, coral collected by the artist in St. Petersburg, FL, geodes from Mexico, geodes from Morocco, glass, golden rutilated quartz with hematite inclusions from Brazil, Herkimer Diamond on matrix from Herkimer, NY, smoky quartz from Brazil, smoky quartz polished by the artist from Brazil, double-terminated enhydro quartz from Tibet, lapis lazuli from Afghanistan, ocean jasper from Madagascar, opal from Australia, pyrite from Brazil, pebble from Mexico, quartz from Brazil, black sand, selenite from Morocco, shark tooth from Morocco, snail shell collected by the artist in St. Petersburg, FL, shells with barnacle growth collected by the artist in St. Petersburg, FL after hurricane Matthew, white aragonite
 
Artist Statement:
 
This art piece references the notion that as the natural beauty of the world diminishes, the wonder and awe derived from seeing it increases.
 
A majority of these natural materials are semi-precious and of course inherently rare substances. However, I used quite a few materials that are becoming increasingly more rare.
 
Ocean jasper is a type of mineral found only in northwestern Madagascar. The two specimens I use in this piece are from the vein near the village of Marovato, which has been completely mined out. Meaning there is no longer any more of the mineral in the place of its origin.
 
Lapis lazuli, which comes from Afghanistan, is beginning to be seen as a “conflict mineral” due to the illegal mining and sale of the mineral by militants, including the Taliban.
 
Copper, a common material in my work, is predicted to run out before the year 2050.
 
The coral, shark tooth and shells reference the natural beauty of living organisms within nature. Many of the world's coral is dying and shark populations have been steadily decreasing.
The Malleability of Choice Through Time
2013-2017
(Sold)
 
20 ga copper wire, 12 ga copper wire, 8 ga copper wire, 6 ga copper wire, acrylic paint, concrete, copper rod, copper wire heat-treated by the artist, copper wire water- treated by the artist, perennial flowers dried by the artist, selenite desert rose from the Sahara desert, selenite desert rose from Arizona, selenite desert rose from Oklahoma, shells found by the artist on St. Petersburg Beach, FL, snail shells collected by the artist in Greece, NY and Tampa, FL, sand collected by the artist in Imperial Dunes, CA
 
 
Artist Statement:
I chose the usage of snail shells, desert rose specimens, sand collected from a desert and perennial flowers because of the symbolism associated with them.
 
Snails and sand are commonly used as symbols of time’s passing.
 
Perennial flowers are a symbol of
the cyclical nature of life.
The Subtleties of An Action:
Picking Up Pebbles
In A Parking Lot
2015-2017
(Sold)
acrylic paint, concrete, leopard skin jasper from Brazil, obsidian from Mexico, slate collected by the artist in Conklin’s Gully, NY, pebbles collected by the artist in a truck stop parking lot, LA, tiger’s eye from Brazil, unidentified rock found by the artist in Arizona
 
 
Artist Statement:
 
I collected the pebbles in the parking lot of a truck stop in Louisiana that had numerous billboards advertising a Live Tiger. My imagination could not prepare me for how sad the scene was to me. The fumes from the trucks and cars caused my throat and nose to burn and the habitat for the tiger was very minimal. There were also preserved taxidermy tigers in the gift shop and restaurant from past display animals.
 
There was, at one point, a group of people protesting the tigers being kept in this truck stop and the truck stop won. I had planned to gather materials during this road trip so I grabbed one of my plastic bags and took a few handfuls.
 
This art piece was created to raise awareness of this place and to raise awareness for the well being of all big cat species. I have included two minerals that are removable. One is Blue Tiger’s Eye and the other is Leopard Skin jasper. It was my intention to pay homage to the idea of being able to lift, or rescue, these beautiful animals from harmful environments.
“Know Thyself”: An Inquiry Into One’s Social Dynamics
2015-2017
(Sold)
 
patina and crystallized 24 ga copper wire, patina and crystallized 6 ga copper wire, patina and crystallized copper pipe, acrylic paint, crystallized concrete, fluorite from Brazil, pyrite from Brazil, salt
Artist Statement: The phrase "Know Thyself" is an idea proposed by Socrates. The idea is that to know one's self yields a greater result, and is more important, than knowing obscure ideas. The notion is also that knowing one's self, one's identity, inclinations, motives, tendencies and so on is not as simple to accomplish as it sounds. With my title I suggest that to "Know Thyself" one has to equally know their social dynamics. One's family, friends, heroes and mentors are all extensions of one's self.
 
I used fluorite and pyrite because they have similar structures in that the grow in defined lines, often in recognizable cubic shapes. They are also found growing on top of, and through each other. I also incorporated salt because it grows in cubic shapes. However, salt is really only visible to the human eye with instrumentation.
The overall design of the sculpture is made up of concrete cubes that are conjoined by the copper and minerals.
 
The entirety of the sculpture underwent months of a patina fuming process. The body of the sculpture was placed slightly above the water line, in a tub filled with water and salt. The sculpture itself was also covered with salt. Salt crystals had grown in various places on the sculpture before it was removed from the tub. After being removed from the tub the salt crystals fell off.
Colors: Green
2016-2017
(Sold)
12 ga aluminum wire, 12 ga copper wire, 8 ga copper wire heat-treated by the artist, acrylic paint, copper nuggets from Michigan, emerald from Brazil, green quartz from Brazil, ink, ruby in fuchsite from Brazil
Colors: Yellow
2016-2017
(Sold)
 
12 ga aluminum wire, 12 ga copper coated aluminum wire, 8 ga copper wire, acrylic paint, azurite with malachite from the Republic of the Congo, concrete, coral collected by the artist in St. Petersburg, FL, hemimorphite from Wenshan, Yunnan Province, China, ink, pyrite with quartz from Brazil, shark tooth from Morocco
A Saddening Relativity
2015-2017
(Sold)
28 ga copper wire, 8 ga copper wire, acrylic paint, black sand, concrete, oil paint, quartz from Brazil

Balloon Composition Experience

2016-November 5, 2017

Composition Series Installation at the Ybor City Chamber of Commerce and Centennial Park, Ybor.

https://www.thornhillfoundationforthearts.org/

http://ybor.org/

https://yborcityonline.com/ybor-city-chamber-of-commerce/

(Click photos for full image)

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