Skipping Painted Stones
An entertaining art blog based in rural Iowa and written by author and artist Haley McAndrews.
Hands down, my favorite thing about art is the variety. Everyone has their own individual taste in art, and no two artists’ work is alike, even those that work with the same mediums and subject matter! So let’s learn about each other and share our artwork with each other as often as we can. 😊 My first Artist Interview blog post features the work of the Knotty Carver, Justin Miller! Miller is a wood worker from Canby, Minnesota. In his words, “I usually like to do one of a kind and/or custom designed furniture to fit the customers’ needs.” Since the main component of his art is wood, the pieces are quite literally one-of-a-kind originals! He can fill in the gaps and holes with resin, sometimes tinted, with items embedded, or clear like glass. “I feel my work is unique,” says Miller. “Done with care so it can be a wonderful conversation starter for years to come.” He’s currently working on a custom end table that is made of a slab of wood from a pine tree that had been twisted by a tornado. As if that wasn’t enough, Miller will be adding two more shelves to it for a laptop and other miscellaneous items. His plan for the top is to pour resin on each side with the wood slab in the middle. The resin will be colored with chameleon mica powder (that’s what gives it the swirly, metallic shimmer), in plum and gold color. But tables aren’t the only thing Miller creates. Below is a clock he made out of black walnut wood with a tiger orange resin. I asked Miller what his favorite tool for making art was. “Honestly it would be my sawmill,” Miller said. “I like the surprise of cutting a slab and seeing what the tree can provide in its aged lines along with the burl-like looks from the stress the branches have endured over the years.” His favorite piece he’s made so far, and one of his most popular, is a chess table made out of pinecones. “I really love how the pinecones just pop out in the ever-so-clear resin, when you look at it on the sides you get a 3D look that kinda teases your eyes.” Miller is self- taught, combining his lessons and training from a number of different trades, people, mentors, and family, into what he calls “a great recipe I’ve applied to my artwork.” His advice for artists just beginning their journey? “Don't give up! Keep creating, keep going, don't be afraid to be different! Get yourself out there!” He says he learned from his failures, while knowing it’s alright to fail. “You NEVER fail by trying.” His next project is building another framed mirror with a design he created on his CNC (computer numerical control) router program, with glow in the dark resin poured into the fixtures, topped off with a layer of resin to really draw out the wood grain. I also asked Miller what an issue is that he’s encountered with his artwork, since every artist has their own stumbling blocks to overcome. “The COLD! Resin Casting has to be poured in a warm environment for it to cure properly,” he said. “Also being new to the business, it is slow progressing. Getting my artwork out there into this world is proving to be hard. (But I will prevail!)”
To see Miller’s new work or to get in contact with him about your very own beautiful commission, you can find the Knotty Carver on Facebook at Facebook.com/JustinTheKnottyCarver.
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3/15/2022 0 Comments Travel and the Art AfterI’ve done a fair share of traveling in my day. Many of the details of our family vacations growing up are lost to me now, but I remember some things: when we lived in Utah, I remember going to Disneyland (I think we went to Universal once too), to the Arches National Park, and to a cave in a mountain (you had to hike up the mountain, then descend through the cave back to the bottom.) I’ve even been to England a few times. The older I’m getting, the more these trips are having an impact on me, and increasingly, my artwork after returning home! For example, we took a family trip to New York City in 2018. With three kids. Ages 13, 10, and 9 months. Surprisingly, the baby was the easiest one (no complaining about walking!) When she was tired, she would fall asleep where she was: in a carrier strapped to my chest in the subway, in Times Square in her stroller pushed by her older brother, or safely cradled in daddy’s arms. The boys, on the other hand, complained about the walking Every. Single. Day. Until we got home, and since then it has gone down as a contender for “Best Vacation Ever!” For me, the city was inspiring. Three years later and I am still painting cities! Times Square’s advertising was overwhelming, but I’m still glad I briefly experienced it once in my life. Here’s the painting I made after we got home from New York, titled “Everyone we met in New York City was Nice Except that One Guy”: That was the only one I added a monster to, now that I think about it. Actually, I have a cityscape on my easel right now, and it would really benefit from a monster or two. *Note to self, add monster(s) to new painting.* The title of that painting is actually referencing a story from our trip when my oldest stepson got trapped by the aggressive dressed up characters in Times Square (in particularly a Minnie Mouse, who would not physically release his arm until I demanded that she “Let my son go!”) Another trip I was artistically inspired by was our trip to Nevada a few months later, this time without my stepsons. We went to Las Vegas with a baby. With a sick baby. She got a bad cold that lasted the whole trip, so in all of our pictures her cheeks are bright red and she just looks miserable! We saw many of the sights of Vegas in daytime, visited the Hoover Dam, and explored the Valley of Fire. What fascinated me most was the landscape. The lawns are made of gravel! And while we have flat fields in Iowa as far as the eye can see, some of the desert we drove through is FLAT flat! Regardless, it was an excellent trip and my husband and I both agree it was a near perfect vacation, even with a sick baby. Here’s the painting/mixed media piece I made for my husband when we returned home, I called it “The Natures of Nevada”: The colors in the Valley of Fire were so unique, and I wanted to have it juxtaposed against the city with so much unnatural lighting. I made the background a dark green, which in hindsight seems a bit cruel as there is so little green in the landscape there.
Our next vacation is already in the works, and we are returning to Florida! Half of our vacation will be in the panhandle, visiting my grandparents. The second half of the vacation will be spent at Universal, where we plan to return to the Wizarding World in full, six-nerd-family-member-Hogwarts-robed glory! I expect there will be some art inspired by this trip – if nothing else, we will have some epically nerdy photos to bring home with us. …Did I mention that we are driving instead of flying? Prayers are welcome. |
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