Sunday, 23 April 2017
Day 20
Second
last day of our trip!
Inga and
I went to the mountains and had a great time. I think it was a good wrap up of
our journey.
It has
been forever since I saw mounted snow. The view was amazing and I took so many
photos but none of my selfies came out good. It was quite warm, which made
everything easier for us and I felt very relieved.
I cannot
believe we are going home tomorrow.
Day 18
First
thing in the morning was to visit Peter Bauhuis' studio.
Being
able to look at his works and to play around with them were really cool.
My
favouite work from his studio were the vessels from casting with two different
molds poured in at the same time.
It gave
such a beautiful contrast of the colours!
When we
went over to the gallery his works were exhibited, we got to see more vessels
and they were beautiful!
I like
the way he put some of his vessels under lighting , casting a shadow. I think
they look better under lighting and I liked inside of his vessels, they were
very precious!!
He does a
lot of experiments and I love the way they turned out.
It was a
really good studio visit.
Day 17
Everyone
made their way to the castle but I chose to wander around and explore Munich
more! It was good to have some time to myself, had a very chilled day in such a
long time.
Day 16
Pinokitech
The
building was amazingly built, I especially loved the ceiling, and they had such
a wide range of works on show!
I liked
most of the things there, starting with paintings, furnitures, technology and
the vessels from the old days, jewellery and so much more. It was a big space
and so much to absorb in. I think paintings and the old vessels were my
favourite.
Day 8
Day trip!
Gallery
Marzee & CODA
CODA had
such a wide range of broch collections! I was overwhelmed by the amount of
brooches I saw at the gallery. I really liked Lucy Sarneel's ring collection! I
like how they were all in similar shapes and form but each individual had
unique qualities.
Marzee
Although
many pieces were on their way to Munich, we still got to look at wide spectrum of jewellery!
I
recognized many of the works, going through each drawers, and I quite enjoyed
reading the books afterwards.
Had a
very long day.
Day 7
Ruudt
Peter
Many of
the works we saw today were made out of resin and he had black in majority of
his works.
I loved
the blown glass sculpture, loved the sound of it. I really loved his ring!! It
was a chunky, about 6cm long, cylindrical ring made out of resin, the exterior
felt like soft wood and could see each black drops inside has formed into
black, loosened thin lines. It definitely didn't fit me but I just wanted to
keep it as an artwork.
Galerie Rob Koudijs
I
really enjoyed the collection of works the gallery presented. My favourite was
Francis Willemstijn's pair of
earrings! It represented a map of Amsterdam, which she developed a system, then
transferred the old map on oak, with use of silver as lines dividing parts of
the map. And of course, they were so expensive that I could not afford.
Gallery
Ra
Gallery
Ra had exhibited works of Jorge Manilla and Nils Hint as their current
exhibition along with many other artists' collections.
Jorge
Manilla exhibited collection of black broches of flowers she took as main
inspiration in symbols and shape.
The
shapes of the work were quite violent to me, but there was something
aesthetically pleasing about it, and I could feel the warmth, although all the
materials were black.
Nils
Hint's work was a collection of tools and everyday objects, such as combs and
hair pins. They were both ended, one end was gold plated and they seemed quite
mass produced. I think his works seemed quite industrialised overall.
Day 6
Day 6
02/03
Ela Bauer
visit
We
had a busy day ahead of us and got to
start our day off with heavy rain on our way to visit Ela Bauer's studio. We
had the chance to look at many of her previous works, draw by draw. The
majority of her works were colourful and also quite playful. She has worked a
lot with resin and silicon, and it was very tempting to touch them!
Bauer has
worked with many small scaled objects, as well as bigger scaled adornments. I
did not buy any rings I have tried on but I definitely enjoyed putting her
silicon and resin rings on my fingers.
Peter
Hoogeboom
I liked
one of the glass pieces that made a really nice sound.
Day 13
Laura
Deakin & Mari Ishikawa's studio visit
I liked
both of their works very much!
Laura's
jewellery with pearls were so precious, the designs were simple and elegant.
She
seemed very passionate about her work and definitely encouraging for us to
participate in competitions to challenge ourselves and to gain experience from
those activities. Hearing her talk about her product and artistic line
definitely made me contemplate on how I would be able to manage my works after
I graduate.
Mari's
current exhibition 'parallel world', was about different worlds always existing
simultaneously and that we are always able to find. Mari has used akoya pearls
in her works and I liked the way she has only used one pearl per piece of work,
making it seem more precious and valuable.
She said
she was very attracted to lights and shadows, and her works in Moonlight Shadow
were very organic and mysterious.
Day 12
Our last destination Munich!!
We went straight off to exhibition to get our Munich Jewellery week started!
Got to see many works we have already came across and I bought a gemstone setting book!
We went straight off to exhibition to get our Munich Jewellery week started!
Got to see many works we have already came across and I bought a gemstone setting book!
Day 11
Goldsmith's
house
Herman
Hunger's pieces were brilliant!
I
remember having such a hard time trying to do my cloissone last year, being so
fiddly and taking up so much time and didn't quite turn out perfectly. But his
series of works were really amazing. They are precise, finish of the work is
beautiful and everything was just perfect. The lines are so fine and it must
have took him ages to finish them!! The artist even set the stones on same
piece of metal as he's done his cloisonne on. We weren't able to touch the
pieces but the backing of the brooches seemed well finished also.
Museum
visit
I quite
enjoyed the museum.
The
Japanese exhibition of woodblock printing was very interesting to see. I
personally felt as if I was looking at a westernized Japanese cartoon. The
history of Japanese art being introduced into the Western society was
fascinating.
The
woodblock printing also remained as a convenient technique to reproduce written
texts.
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
Day 9
Although
we could not see the jewellery exhibition in Stedelijk museum, we still got to
enjoy other running exhibitions.
It was
good seeing Marc Chagall's famous cubism paintings, along with Segantini,
Matisse and many more.
Van
Gough's museum was amazing.
It was
extremely crowded as it was a Sunday but every single piece of work was so
worth looking in to!
I loved
his paintings, every single one of them, and his letters to his brother were
also memorable. I had the chance to hear it from the audio phone, translated
into English, and I must say they were very artistic.
I think I
really enjoyed reading the letters because they were very personal and
emotional. They show struggles and hardships he encountered to have a
successful career as an artist, and that
show he was so passionate about art that he could never give it up in
any circumstances.
I really
wanted to stay longer but had to get going to do some exploring.
I got off
at Dam Square, walked over to the Nine Streets, wandered around in the rain,
trying to find some unique, warm clothing to bring back home with me. Actually
ended up buying a pair of shoes and a hoodie.
Dinner
was outside of the hostel, at 'Moders' and I enjoyed my plate. But I think
everyone really enjoyed their desserts!
Day 4
We had an
early start with our first destination being London Bridge. The weather was
warm, but I started to freeze when we walked over the bridge.
I can't
remember name of the glass gallery we visited after the textile museum, but I
loved all the works in there. I especially enjoyed the tiniest threads of glass
contained inside the large glass tubes in every different colour, stacked by
rows against the wall. The lighting behind a rack made the bubbles inside the
glass tube clearer, and it made me feel like
I was in a science lab, inventing something. His glass works were really
cool!!
Peter
Layton's satellite dish made of small fragments of clear glass was beautiful. I
thought it would be a nice chandellier when hung down from the ceiling.
One of
artist I really liked was Harry Morgan. His works show different states of
materiality, using processes that fluctuate between accident and control.
Morgan also believes materials have different states or phases, and that glass
sits in an unusual place within those conditions. His works made me reflect back on my glass
classes I took last year. In the class, I tried really hard to be in control of
what I wanted to make, but at the same time, I was also waiting for that little
accident to happen, for mysterious and uncertain outcomes.
Donna
Brennan's studio visit was very helpful. I especially like upstairs where she
worked.
I was
very interested in her way of producing works with different approaches, one
artistic and the other being a product line. I think I have learnt the most on
taking different approaches when working as an individual or for the gallery,
and problems encountered when orders are received and you are expected to
reproduce the work multiple times in a short amount of time.
Our last night in London!
Day 3
We
started the day off at an Italian restaurant and granola was so fresh! Salmon
and avocado was just ok, nothing special but the coffee was good :):)
Our visit
to Studio fusion was helpful, getting to know more about how gallery runs and
how it is commissioned amongst the artists. Discussion on target of the
customer was also helpful, that customers coming into those types of galleries
are looking for unique designs, not for the materials.
V&A's
jewellery collection was awesome! We got to look at different types of
jewellery from the early days till now. They had so many gemstones!! Which was
very exciting and it was good to see transition of the designs.
I must
say Saatchi gallery has such an amazing gallery space!! Everything is spaced
out, neat and tidy. I think it was one of my favourite gallery spaces I have
been to.
Then we went to a Chinese restaurant and it was very delicious :)
Day 2
Our
second day was a free day to ourselves!!
Shianne,
Aaron and I decided to go to Camden market , then wander around the London
city.
We walked
forever to get to the British Museum, as Aaron insisted to walk. Nonetheless,
we could not explore and observe artworks or the place leisurely as we ran out
of time for our next schedule and Shianne and I lost Aaron.
We had
more time to observe the artworks at Tate, and they had few exhibition running,
but could not see as the queue was forever!! However, Tate had nice mixture of
bits of everything and it was good to see some of abstract expressionists'
works such as Picasso and Braque's paintings again in a different space. I
especially liked one of the kinetic works by jeanne Pierre Yvaral 'Kinetic
Relief - Optical Acceleration 1963). Her work changes movement quite rapidly as
the viewer changes position. I liked her works because it has many different
perspectives to how we can view the artwork and often, our situations or
surroundings can change its perspective depending on how we view it.
Finally
dinner time! We all headed down to a nearby Indian restaurant to our hostel and
I quite enjoyed it.
Monday, 10 April 2017
Day 20
Today the sickness got me. I felt it coming on last night but ignored it and now it is not good. I had a slow morning and then at about 12pm went out in search of soup which took way longer than expected. after that when I was sitting in the hostel eating my soup and felling sorry for myself I met a dude from Newcastle that was now living in Germany and was in Munich for some brewer exam, yes thats right some Aussie moved to Germany to learn how to make beer, and its pretty much the dream. anyway he coerced me with the promise of sun and beer to accompany him to the English Garden which I did and was totally worth it. we sat and chatted for a little, each taking turn to talk about our craft and it was obvious that both of us could hear the passion in the other which is nice, I think it has been a while since someone really asked me about what I like and why I like making jewellery and even just about little things and honestly it was really great to just talk about the act of making and not about the object. afterwards as the sun started to go down we headed further down to where the surfing was and watched it for a little, man it is so so cool and i felt so much envy towards them, not only for being able to surf but for being in the water, I really really miss the ocean and I think it is getting to me. later that night we all went out for a final dinner as a group to the same restaurant we had visited as we first got to Munich. I think it was a really good ending and although the trip had ups and downs I think it was really rewarding and eye-opening and I really really thank Karin for the opportunity that she has given us and guided us through.
Day 19
Today we went to Dachau Concentration Camp which was a really confronting experience. I think being in Australia we aren't often confronted with the reality of war and it was quite an eye opening experience, afterwards I felt myself in a sort of sorrowful daze for the rest of the day.
Day 18
Today we spent most of our time with Peter Bauhuis, first in his studio and then later we met him at his exhibition for MJW. firstly, his studio was awesome! it looked exactly like my desk when in the thick of a project, which was a small pinch of validation that being a hurricane maker is totally fine. Anyway, his work was incredible and it was so interesting learning about his process and experimentations with different alloys. It was also really great to see a vast spread of his previous body of work before going to his newest exhibition for MJW. you could definitely see a progression and experimentation through the years ie. looking at scale and alloys. I also found the his work from the academy so interesting, that work he did by drilling through the building! so good! and also the work he did about gallium and the jewellery that was his but he pretended it wasn't, man that guy is a genius! Anyway after the studio we went and got a coffee and then wandered around a little, went to another gallery and had some sushi and then met back up at his gallery space to see his current exhibition with the chain trees which were so amazing, the amount of consideration that goes into creating something that must fall apart to fall together, such an amazing idea and beautifully executed. also in the other room of the gallery I really enjoyed the works were he used the alloys of the European coins to do his lost wax casting, and the duality between the gold and blackened alloy was incredible. After Peter's a few of us went in search of no. 31 on the map which was a really beautiful exhibition at Gallery Shanghai featuring the very large body of work 'Kiene Vase' or 'I am not a vase' by Jing Yang. Each of her pieces were geometric vases but cut into sections, so each 20mm band was individually crafted to create these vessels, it was so incredible. there was one wall in the exhibition with the artists notes on it and it was insane how much calculation and detail was in each piece. I was really taken by just how much work was presented by the artist, although there were a few galleries that exhibited just one artist, it was not where near as vast an exhibition, I found the whole thing very inspirational.
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