All good thing comes to an end. Life is a common occurrence for humans, animals, and plants. But objects also have a lifetime. This life assigned to them ends by breaking and deteriorating. So, we also fix them. We give a little more time to their lives. Some of us do it more subtly, and some of us give it a completely different face. Artist Glen Martin Taylor complements broken porcelain items by combining them with unusual objects.
Ancient Japanese art Kintsugi is based on repairing broken items by varnishing them with a gold-mixed liquid. While the broken pottery items were repaired, they are honored with the traces of their experiences. Ceramic objects, which look much more magnificent than their old form, also clarify their flaws with their transformation. The works of Glen Martin Taylor make these flaws even more apparent.
Glen Martin Taylor transfer his emotions to objects
Repairing broken ceramic objects, Taylor brings them to their final forms using many different things such as barbed wire, rusty metals, thread, spoon, scissors, or spoon. Thus, even if the object looks like an ordinary cup, vase, or plate at first glance, it also conveys an eerie feel. Items such as jugs, cups, and vases completed using the barbed wire create aesthetically warm feelings. On the other hand, the strings push the viewer away from him.
Glen Martin Taylor initially worked on pottery but found it restrictive. On top of that, he begins to crumble his ceramic works. Taylor says he read about Kintsugi long ago, long before he started breaking objects. In the production process, which consists of two stages, breaking and repair create their own value.
American filmmaker and scholar Wheeler Winston Dixon created “What Comes Next” a short film by only using footage and soundtracks in the Public Domain.
Fenna Schilling is a graphic designer and a DJ whose visual and sonic collages have versatile characteristics. The intuitively crafted artworks of the artist provide an opportunity for her personal exploration through cut and paste technique and make way for an open-ended process.
We created a summary of productivity focused designer tools under four main categories because there is an abundance of tools on the internet right now.
Glen Martin Taylor Patches Broken Porcelain With Barbed Wire
All good thing comes to an end. Life is a common occurrence for humans, animals, and plants. But objects also have a lifetime. This life assigned to them ends by breaking and deteriorating. So, we also fix them. We give a little more time to their lives. Some of us do it more subtly, and some of us give it a completely different face. Artist Glen Martin Taylor complements broken porcelain items by combining them with unusual objects.
Ancient Japanese art Kintsugi is based on repairing broken items by varnishing them with a gold-mixed liquid. While the broken pottery items were repaired, they are honored with the traces of their experiences. Ceramic objects, which look much more magnificent than their old form, also clarify their flaws with their transformation. The works of Glen Martin Taylor make these flaws even more apparent.
Glen Martin Taylor transfer his emotions to objects
Repairing broken ceramic objects, Taylor brings them to their final forms using many different things such as barbed wire, rusty metals, thread, spoon, scissors, or spoon. Thus, even if the object looks like an ordinary cup, vase, or plate at first glance, it also conveys an eerie feel. Items such as jugs, cups, and vases completed using the barbed wire create aesthetically warm feelings. On the other hand, the strings push the viewer away from him.
Glen Martin Taylor initially worked on pottery but found it restrictive. On top of that, he begins to crumble his ceramic works. Taylor says he read about Kintsugi long ago, long before he started breaking objects. In the production process, which consists of two stages, breaking and repair create their own value.
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