Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Art Tour of Tacoma


I spent the weekend in rainy, windy Tacoma. My son and I went on the Tacoma Studio Tour and met many wonderful artists. We learned some Sumi painting techniques and made ceramic tiles as well. We met potters and painters, printers and marblers. It was a great way to see the city and meet some of its talented residents. Here are some pictures from the weekend.

Enjoy!



Flying into Seattle Friday, October 14.


Printed at Springtide Press


Sumi Ink painting taught by Lois Yoshida.

Artwork by Fumiko Kimura.


Hand marbled paper by Karen Perrine


Rainbow over Tacoma.

Wooden bone folder by Henry Haneda.


Rainbow over University of Puget Sound

Sunday, September 25, 2016

New Classes at Art Lounge on 101

I will be teaching two more classes at the Art Lounge on 101 in October and November. I hope some of you can join me for folding fun and a new structure. Sign up on the website:

http://artloungeon101.com/

I am teaching The Road to Spring on October 29 from 10-1 and a new structure called Taking Flight on November 18 from 1-3 PM at 816 South Coast Hwy 101 in Encinitas, across from the Lumberyard. It is a roomy space with lots of natural light that is good for folding. Below are pictures of the books we will be making.

Enjoy!

-Gina



The Road to Spring folded book.

Taking Flight-crane book.

Several examples of this structure.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

A Lifetime of Collecting

I don't know about you, but I have been a collector all my life. I remember finding shells and crystals at Lake Ontario with friends as a child. Whenever I am near a beach I still like to look for rocks, shells and sea glass. I even found someone's class ring at the beach once. My hands can't help but pick up interesting bits and pieces. I bring them home, wash and sort them and display them around the house. I have even written poems about collecting. Here is a glimpse at some of my collections.

I hope you treasure your collections too.

-Gina

Crystals from Lake Ontario and the 1970's box they have lived in ever since.

I converted an old watch crystal case into a hub for my various collections. 





Sea glass from my travels displayed in old glass jars.

Glass, pottery and coral from a recent trip to Scotland.


A Poem on Collecting:

Butterflies rest on the rim of a sink
Static blue shells washed free of sand
Ready to fly at the stir of a breeze
They beg for collection in a child's small hand.




Monday, September 19, 2016

Thoughts on Teaching

I have been a teacher for many years. I was once a science and art teacher at a school for the deaf in Massachusetts. I taught art classes at my kids elementary school and more recently book arts classes in San Diego and Tacoma have been my focus. It is always a learning experience to teach a group of people a new concept. I am looking forward to more of these experiences.

Here are some pictures of my student's hands folding paper in our Road to Spring workshop from Saturday's class at the Art Lounge on 101.  I just love expressive hands folding paper.

Enjoy!






Thursday, August 4, 2016

Teaching at Art Lounge on 101

For those of you in the San Diego area, I will be teaching an origami book structure I invented called " The Road to Spring" on September 17 at Art Lounge on 101. Here is the flier for the class and the books that were inspired by this structure.

Enjoy,

Gina



Example made with rectangular sections.

The Road to Spring, my first book made with this structure.


Companion Star, shown with the "pages" removed.

As Deep Can Be closed.

Sample book with flattened points so it can stand up.

Spiral Atlas, variation on the basic structure.


Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Time and Place

San Diego Book Arts is holding a member show this fall at a traditional art gallery with lots of wall space and not much room for standing works like traditional artist's books. That means they are asking members to come up with "books" that can hang on the walls. I have been trying out various ideas for this show and here is my latest attempt. I call it Time and Place since it represents the fall night sky constellations imposed onto a folded paper structure.

I hope you like the results. I feel like it still needs something more, but here is the work so far.

-Gina

I printed a map of the northern hemisphere's fall constellations onto graph paper.

Next, I scaled up the map using a bigger sheet of graph paper that had the same divisions. Each square on the smaller sheet represents a 3 x 3 square on the larger paper.

I folded the 18 x 24 sheet of paper into a chevron pattern then flattened it, placed the graph paper drawing over it and punched holes using a Japanese screw punch. I used 5 sizes to represent different star magnitudes (from 1mm to 3mm).

Here's a closeup of the paper with the stars punched.

I like the idea of shaping the piece with this bend in the middle to suggest the curvature of space-time.

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Tiny Book Necklaces II

In a previous post I showed you several tiny book necklaces that I made last year before attending FOBA (Focus on Book Arts). I recently made a Hedi Kyle inspired one for my class with her and yesterday I got truly nuts and made one based on my latest structure; the Spiral Atlas. They both required some creative folding (using tools when my fingers were too large) and patience. Below are pictures of both and step outs of the spiral atlas.
Enjoy!

-Gina

Hedi Kyle inspired diagonal pocket folder. 
Made from 1 5/8 x 2.5 inch paper. (3/4 x 1/2 inches closed).


Folder open showing diagonal pockets and golden lining.


Spiral Atlas book necklace. 
The largest section is 1 inch and the smallest is 1/2 inch.
When folded they are half that size!


Spiral atlas: I used tracing paper colored with alcohol ink. It measures 1 x 3 3/4 with each section scored and folded in half. Scores are at 1, 7/8, 3/4, 5/8, and 1/2 inch.


Trim off 1/8 inch from each square from left to right, skipping the 1 inch square.


Diagonal fold each square to form an X.


Cut a notch at the fold between squares equal to 1/4 their length at the top and bottom. This makes it possible to fold in the points after the next step.


Collapse each square into a water bomb base along the X folds and center folds. The structure should look like the one below.


Fold in the points on left and right. Unfold and inside reverse fold them to make the shape below.


The book when folded measures less than 2 inches.


Cut squares the same sizes as above (1, 7/8, 3/4, 5/8, and 1/2 inch). Fold them into Hungarian map folds so they nest inside the base structure.


Carefully place inserts in each section and fold down the center points to "lock" them in place. Use a thin scoring tool to help move paper where it needs to go. To form the spiral shape seen in the necklace, glue together the first and last sections by forming a circle. I attached a wire hook using glue, put on a jump ring and threaded a chain through it.