What a wonderful adventure you are having! We are enjoying the postings and find the paper works fascinating and beautiful. Congratulations on the discovery of your rabbit! Anne
Lovely,lovely dresden! I am here via your 'paper turkey' image - not sure how I even got there, but happy I did! You have some wonderful posts, and your projects are delightful! Ulla www.ullam.typepad.com
Meredith Carruthers is an artist living in Montreal. In 2004 Meredith completed her MFA at Concordia University, where her studies included the exchange program to The Glasgow School of Art. In recent projects she has constructed a life-sized crepe paper swan and created a velour archipelagos for tinfoil cats. Meredith has participated in exhibitions in Montreal, Vancouver and New York.
Meredith is a member of Leisure Projects with Susannah Wesley, an independent artist-curator initiative that seeks opportunities in glamorous hotel basements, tiny modernist apartments and in the gaps of established gallery programming.
Paper is thin material used for writing upon, printing upon or packaging. It is produced by the amalgamation of fibres, typically vegetable fibers composed of cellulose, which are subsequently held together by hydrogen bonding. While the fibres are usually natural in origin, a wide variety of synthetic fibres, such as polypropylene and polyethylene, may be incorporated into paper as a way of imparting desirable physical properties. The most common source of these kinds of fibres is wood pulp from pulpwood trees. Vegetable fibre materials such as cotton, hemp, linen, and rice are also used.
Alchemy
Alchemy refers to both an early form of the investigation of nature and an early philosophical and spiritual discipline, both combining elements of chemistry, metallurgy, physics, medicine, astrology, semiotics, mysticism, spiritualism, and art all as parts of one greater force. Alchemy has been practiced in Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, Persia, India, and China, in Classical Greece and Rome, in the Muslim civilization, and then in Europe up to the 19th century—in a complex network of schools and philosophical systems spanning at least 2500 years.
2 comments:
What a wonderful adventure you are having! We are enjoying the postings and find the paper works fascinating and beautiful. Congratulations on the discovery of your rabbit!
Anne
Lovely,lovely dresden! I am here via your 'paper turkey' image - not sure how I even got there, but happy I did! You have some wonderful posts, and your projects are delightful!
Ulla
www.ullam.typepad.com
Post a Comment