Posts Tagged ‘kurt madison’

Thinking about design and contests

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Rings & Things’ own Metalman, Kurt Madison, took some time before our big design contest to talk about what makes a winning entry…

I have been reflecting on what wins an award in a contest. Is it the biggest / most elaborate entry? The one with the most obvious $$ spent?

What makes this a winning contest entry?

What makes this a winning contest entry?

Lots of times, it does seem to look that way.  When you feel like it works that way, try looking at several years of winners for that contest.  There may be a unconscious bias working there somewhere.  I feel I have seen some cultural bias in international art exhibitions — this happens and you can’t really complain about it.  You can become aware of it and use it to your advantage, or at least know that it’s working against you.

So anyway….what makes a winner?  I think it’s always design. The work has to have good design.

How to get to good design?  Well, I guess my method is to collect ideas for a while, then I do small sketches (thumbnails) and play with my elements (beads/stones/etc.), until I start to get a real idea or concept in my mind’s eye.

Then I do some larger drawing.  I really like an expressive/abstract style of drawing — this gives me more ideas. After that:  I do a final design drawing to life-size, and really tight so I can cut metal to fit and all. Many times I get halfway through and the materials or visual ideas shift.  That may mean a new piece gets started, or that the current one gets benched for a while, or just improvements.

So in this description, how many pieces got designed?  Maybe 10 various directions — and from them, picking the best one and making builds for that GOOD DESIGN WINNER.

R&T follows the Yellow Brick Road

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Also known as Garland Street (in Spokane)!

Two Rings & Things artisans are featured in an art show celebrating the 70th anniversary of “The Wizard of Oz”.  Appropriately held at the stalwart Tinman Gallery in Spokane, this OzVitational exhibit showcases artists’ unique takes on the legacy of Dorothy and friends.

Sondra Barrington, our Sales manager by day, mixed found objects with quality vintage-feel findings for a steampunk bracelet titled “Flying Monkeys”.  Like a wearable video clip (from the scariest part of the film!), this piece sports stills from the classic movie transferred onto copper stamping blanks.

flyingmonkey_1

When monkeys fly out of film onto charms!

Some R&T stock used in the bracelet:
…and some Tim Holtz Idea-Ology items, plus a “cash & carry” strand of smoky quartz nuggets as sold at Rings & Things road shows and in our showroom.
margot_kurt_kurtozbx

Kurt (Metalman) Madison is our Art Clay Silver certified expert.  He and partner Margot Casstevens created a collaborative print/sculpture/jewelry piece that the Inlander newspaper called

“one-of-a-kind pendants — ruby slippers, a yellow brick road, the heart so sought after by Tinman himself — hang[ing] from inside their gray weathered box. A knothole in the wood becomes the “O” for Oz and the wood itself is said to be from Dorothy’s Kansas farmhouse…if you let yourself drift to where childlike wonder lives, you can almost believe.”

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The exterior of Kurt & Margot's "OZ BOX"

Many other gifted artists are in the show, too.  So if you’re in Spokane any time this month, head to the Garland District for a visual treat!