Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Hey there! I haven't posted in a while & decided I'd like to post something nature inspired in light of the beautiful summer breeze this evening...

Upon reading one of my favorite clothing company's (Free People) blogs, I discovered some nature inspired art that I thought was pretty inventive & wanted to share...

The project is called 'Little Drifters' and was organized by a company called booooooom & the Vancouver Sun. Participants were asked to gather pieces of driftwood, twigs, leaves, berries, dandelions, pine cones, feathers - pretty much anything that can be considered 'natural' - and build a little boat using only these materials! They were than asked to take their boat to a body of water & take a picture of it. I find them wonderfully creative & fun to view - each one has its own individual personality. I love the idea!

I actually already grab little pieces of nature here and there that inspire me. Whether it be seashells from the ocean to turn into jewelry that I wear, driftwood from the sand to use in decorative arrangements, or flowers from my garden to wear in my hair, nature has and always will play a strong presence in my inspiration for art. It is my root, my essence, & I study it not only to draw inspiration to create, but to draw answers for life.

Enjoy some of the photos below: (P.S. Here's a link to Summer Breeze if you'd like to listen while browsing.)



















Photobucket

Emma Hack has made a name for herself as one of the most creative and visionary Australian artists to come along in years. But she doesn’t work on canvas or clay; her medium is the beautiful form of the human body.

Photobucket

Hack began her career as a makeup artist, hairdresser and children’s face painter. But her talents have continued to grow and evolve over the last two decades into the mature and fascinating form she works in today. Her paintings are applied directly to models’ bodies and match up perfectly with their background, acting as a kind of camouflage. But the bodies are not entirely hidden in the patterns; rather, they become part of the pattern and allow the background to flow even more beautifully.

Photobucket

The wallpapers featured are by the legendary designer Florence Broadhurst, licensed specifically for Hack’s use. The intricate designs can sometimes take up to 19 hours to apply. When finished, the model’s body is at once a continuation of the design and a completely unique work of art on its own. The designs accentuate, rather than hide, the fluid beauty and grace of the human form.

Photobucket

The wallpaper paintings began with Emma doing the painting herself and a photographer making the images. However, as she has continued to grow as an artist, Emma has taken over the photography as well. She has experimented with adding creatures and other types of designs in to her paintings, adding a new element to the concept of her amazing body art.

Photobucket

Although most of her subjects have been female, Emma has also experimented with painting the male form. The wallpaper designs she uses with the male models are necessarily different; they highlight the strength of the male form and the very different curvatures of the male body. She calls all of her models her “muses,” and her affection for the art and for the human form is apparent in every painting. She manages to make the bodies of her muses look infinitely inviting, fragile and soft without once over-sexualizing them.

Photobucket

Emma’s work has been shown and celebrated all around the world, winning her several awards and establishing a firm following for the budding artist. She has done many series other than the Wallpapers, including “Cowscape” which features stunning paintings on cows. Her inspiration, she says, comes from nature and all of the diverse cultures of the world.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

I am with you

Believe and know that I Am here not only for you but AS you.

If you embrace that I Am here for you, it is an understanding that should
you need my help and reach out to me, I will reach back.


However, this reaching back and forth can create a lag between your
need and my response. It is not, therefore, an appropriate metaphor for
our relationship.

Rather, understand that I Am not here for you but I Am here AS you.
I cannot be separate from you.


There is no lag between your request and my response. It may take a
while to align things in perfect ways so that the outcome serves all my
children, but the response is instantaneous.

This day, affirm that we are one.

Know that the desires of your soul are not merely on my "to do list"

-- they are already done and moving toward you even now.

Love,
I AM
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]