Sunday, April 13, 2008

Featured Designer #1: meghan williams of birdcage jewelry

This is our first, of many, Featured Designer posts. At Paper Boat we stock our shop with items from over 200 artists, crafters & designers from around the country and abroad. So, we decided to ask a bunch of our designers 7 questions to get to know them better.

A large part of the Featured Designer aspect of our Blog is that it helps us remember that one of the many reasons to support independently produced work, is there is a person behind what is being created. Making with work more personable by knowing what makes the people tick, what music they listen to while creating and what inspires make the individual items much more personal and special to us.

So, with that said, we would like to introduce you to our premier Featured Designer......

*Please note that our interviews are not edited and pasted directly from the featured designer's emails.

Name: meghan williams
Business Name: birdcage jewelry
Location: san francisco, ca
(all images provided by the artist)

Paper Boat: Tell us briefly what you make & do:
meghan: i make pretty earbobs and necklaces from vintage beads, paper, horn, wood, bone and other fancy things. most of what i make is one of a kind which makes every girl that wears birdcage very very special.

PB: How long have you been doing it?
m: i started selling in spring of 2006, but i've been messing about since high school.

PB: Where did you learn your skills?
m: mostly self taught. i quit drinking and smoking a couple years ago and had quite a bit of time on my hands. making the jewels kept my hands busy and my heart happy.

PB: What's your current inspiration?
m: i am in school now at california college of the arts (cca) - learning metalsmithing. i fucking love it. it opens a whole new realm of possibilities for me. i am interested in continuing the asymmetry of my current work, but new and improved with METAL.

PB: What have you been listening to while you work?
m: kevin drew, broken social scene, say hi, the smiths, sterolab

PB: What else do you do to keep busy?
m: explore my new town. i moved to san francisco 6 months ago with my boyfriend. there is a ton of awesomeness here and there's always something going on. my new favorite is going to the ocean and taking pictures with my fancy new camera. i am absolutely amazed at how close i am to the beach. i was born and bred in wisco, so you can imagine the shock of it. it is february. i feel very lucky to be here.


PB: Any summer plans you are looking forward to?
m: i am planning to participate in a 3 week studio program in nyc sponsored by cca. i will live and make art and visit artist studios and galleries in brooklyn. i also plan to participate in art vs. craft and visit my hometown for a bit. (i miss you beans and barley! xoxo)

* If you can't make it into Paper Boat to check out birdcage jewelry in person or want to learn more about meghan and her company visit her site HERE.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Blog Review: My Love For You is a Stampede of Horses


















Super sweet review of the current "Feather Your Nest" show at:


Check out the blog "My Love For You is a Stampede of Horses" HERE

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Now Showing! Amy Rice & Abby Glassenberg


Come in a see this show, it looks really fantastic. Amy Rice has over 30 works on display and Abby Glassenberg's bird sculptures are installed into window scene's with fake foliage & rocks (just like the natural history museum!).

Join us for the reception on Friday April 18th, Amy Rice will be coming from Minneapolis to hang out, and the show is up until April 30th.

For photos check out this set here. Please call the gallery for more information on pricing.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Xander Marro show review

Sometimes we just don't find stuff very fast. Read this great review of "Tucker Neath' the Covers" work by Providence based artist Xander Marro on Susceptible to Images.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Juxtapoz & Milwaukee heads up!


Juxtapoz did a nice little blurb about our Amy Rice and Abby Glassenberg show that will open April 3rd.

Also if you are in the Milwaukee area make sure to swing by the "Seeing Green: Art, Ecology and Activism in Milwaukee" show opening on Friday April 12th curated by Nicolas Lampert at Woodland Pattern.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Amy Rice & Abby Glassenberg APRIL!

You won't want to miss......

Feather Your Nest
New work by Amy Rice (Minneapolis, MN) & Abby Glassenberg (Wellesley, MA)
April 4th- April 30th 2008
Opening reception Gallery Night Friday April 18th 2008 7-10pm
Amy Rice will be in attendance

Paper Boat Boutique & Gallery
2375 S. Howell Ave
Milwaukee, WI 53207
414. 483. 8462
www.paperboatboutique.com
Contact curator Faythe Levine for additional print ready images

Curators Statement
Although Amy Rice and Abby Glassenberg have never met they have similar creative aesthetic and motivation. Both artists’ share an affinity for using found, scavenged and recycled items in their work- Amy focuses on paper, Abby on fabric & notions. Feather Your Nest will showcase wall-based work from Amy Rice and three-dimensional soft sculpture by Abby Glassenberg. This will be Rice’s second show at Paper Boat Gallery that will highlight mixed-media works (spray paint, stencil, gocco, gouache, ink, more) on found, vintage paper as well as other found/nontraditional painting surfaces. Glassenberg’s three-dimensional bird sculptures will be installed along with Rice’s work. The gallery will be filled with works that conjure the feeling of spring, re-birth, growth and beauty. I urge you to come be inspired by the work of two talented women that embrace non-traditional methods of creativity, creating captivating work, each piece telling its own story.


Amy Rice Artist Statement
www.amyrice.com

Serendipity played a large part in the direction Minneapolis based (but Wisconsin born and raised) mixed-media artist Amy Rice’s work has taken since her 2007 exhibition at Paper Boat Gallery and Boutique.

First there was her acquisition of a gocco printer forgotten in a small town craft store. Gocco printers are small, self-contained, screen-printing machines sold as toys in Japan. At one time one in every three Japanese households owned a gocco printer, but with the advent of computers/printers they fell out of use. American crafters have just begun to discover this remarkable tool, but the printers are hard to come by. Rice has been using her gocco printer in much of the same ways she has utilized hand-cut stencils…as the starting point for mixed media paintings. She has been making small one-of-a kind works based on some of her most popular stencil paintings with her gocco.

Rice also discovered of a box of handwritten journals written in the 1930’s by a young girl named Emma at a flea market. She bought them to use with her gocco printer but quickly realized she could use her stencil/spray paint method successfully on antique paper as well. Rice has always been attracted to found objects as “canvas”; exploring the sense of history and connectivity between the object and the imagery, she expands on the objects sentimental nature. Rice has become obsessed with antique handwritten documents and has collected and painted on old love letters (both sweet and illicit), library checkout cards with the names and dates checked out going back 70 years, recipe cards yellowed and evidently well used, as well as the pages of handwritten song lyrics of tunes popular in the 1930’s written out by Emma.

Thematically Rice’s work continues to be inspired by the urban community in which she lives, childhood memories (both real and imagined and sometimes exaggerated with time), vintage botanical prints, her dog Ella, bicycles, street art, random found objects, collective endeavors that challenge hierarchy, acts of compassion, downright silliness and things with wings.

Abby Glassenberg Artist Statement
www.whileshenaps.typepad.com

Several years ago I began making one-of-a-kind soft toys. I became fascinated by the process of designing and creating each animal, then stuffing and shaping them to bring them to life. Over time, my pieces became increasingly complex, less like toys and more like sculptures.

With my Nest of Thread series I broke completely with the idea of
making toys and freed myself to create pieces that were truly sculptural. Each piece in this series contains a soft sculpture bird, a vintage spool of thread and some kind of nest-in-the-making. Many of the spools of thread belonged to my grandmother, while others came from complete sewing boxes that I found at thrift stores. These birds with their thread are building nests for their young, just like the women who used this thread two generations ago sewed toys and clothes and household goods to care for their children. Toward the end of this eleven piece series I began to incorporate found objects including receipts, bingo markers, rusted scraps of sheet metal and bits of wood.

After the series was completed I continued making soft sculptures and placing them in scenes, either in boxes or on two-dimensional collages. Many of my soft sculptures are sewn from recycled and found fabric – paper maps, clothing labels, feed-bags and flour sacks. I am inspired by the idea of turning utilitarian fabrics and discarded objects into something new, inviting the viewer to see these overlooked things transformed into graceful birds alighting, preening or guarding a clutch of eggs in a nest. I am excited by the combination of natural and enduring forms, like birds and seashells, with the artificial, the cast aside, the obsolete and the mass-produced.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Important dialog regarding INDIE CRAFT

I just posted this exact post on Super Naturale myspace, my other blog and hope you will repost your own version!

I was passed a link to this discussion thread via Sabrina Gschwandtner who received it from Andrew Wagner. I highly recommend anyone who has interest, investment or pride about what we call "indie craft" to take a gander and give your two cents. And I second the suggestion of Annie who wrote the initial blog post who states "you might want to brew a cup of coffee before you sit down for this one . . ."