Marker Medium: Photograph This photograph speaks to passage and time. Connection with another time and place and the journeying towards a new one. Elizabeth Cecil Elizabeth Cecil is a fine art and editorial photographer based on Martha’s Vineyard. Elizabeth specializes in food, travel and agricultural photography while always pursuing personal bodies of work. She contributes to multiple publications on the island and is the founding and current Photo Editor for Edible Vineyard (2010-present). Elizabeth fell in love with photography chasing trains with her dad in Milwaukee. She made her first pictures with a blue Fisher Price and a roll of 110 film and the excitement of making images has stayed with her ever since. Visit Elizabeth Cecil's profile →
All At Sea By David Saw All At Sea Medium: Music This Photograph brought me back to a time when I was very lost in my life. I was in a relationship I wasn’t sure about and most of my friends had moved away from England to America. I felt alone and I was looking for comradely, for people who felt the same way I did. But then, somehow, when people were around me I felt more lost and lonely. I felt a deep sense of isolation and from that, this song was born. David Saw In 1974, David Saw was born in Aylsberg, outside of London. Walking to school, David passed a guitar store, where he would spend his days hanging out and teaching himself guitar. David was enthralled listening to his uncle’s record collection, filled with artists like Hendricks, Page, and Johnson. At 18, David joined a cover band and toured England playing mostly Motown, cutting his teeth on Steve Cropper’s guitar style. After decades playing in bars, halls, poolrooms, theaters and tour busses of the 80s and 90s, he released his successful first solo album, A Different Story, in 2003. Many successful collaborations have been the result of David’s relationship with Ben Taylor. Their co-written song “I’ll Just Remember You,” is on Simon’s Into White. Visit David Saw's profile →
All At Sea Medium: Painting For me, this Song was about being lost and stuck. It was about making a decision that seems impossible to make and that you need to be rescued from just the idea of it. I was brought to the memory of a friend who was going through a divorce and watching her kids suffer as she was suffering and how powerless she felt. The body gesture in my painting represents having your feet planted in the sand and yet being at the mercy of the waves. Gosia Gosia works as a professional artist, painting and sculpting in Toronto, Canada. Born in Poland in 1982, she moved to Canada in 1994. With a background in Illustration from Sheridan College, Gosia has been exhibiting her art through galleries and contemporary art fairs for six years. Her life’s work is exploring the exciting possibilities of bringing her creations closer to life. Most recently her work has been featured in House & Home Magazine, Hi Fructose Magazine and Colossal Art Blog. Color and line are crucial elements in Gosia’s work, they communicate its most important aspect – emotion. The characters and the moments she creates evoke deep emotions in the viewers, which often leads them to describe how they feel as well as what they see. This powerful connection is what drives the artist’s creativity. Visit Gosia's profile →
Sea Medium: Film In this Song I heard the story of a man who needed saving from his deep sorrow. I saw him wanting to be saved by a woman who he had hurt badly. In my story, he had not paid enough attention to her. He had been egocentric and as a result, had lost her. It is only in her absence that he can see his mistake. He has upset her and lost her and in so doing has lost himself. In the video she is torn between the decision to save him or to save herself. Carlos Lascano Carlos has achieved international recognition for his work as a filmmaker. Most notably “A short love story in stop motion”, “Shadow of Blue” and “The Legend of the Scarecrow” have amassed over 9 million online views, and garnered hundreds of film festival selections and awards worldwide, including a Goya Award selection and Academy Award pre-selections. With his passion for cinematic storytelling and diverse talents, Carlos consistently creates uniquely personal worlds for audiences. His new film, “Lila”, beautifully combines live action with animation and features one of his most charming characters yet. Carlos’ heartfelt storytelling blossoms in his original and innovative style, moving audiences worldwide. Visit Carlos Lascano's profile →
Sea Goddess Medium: Perfume To me, this Painting is about mystical innocents and power. My story of this image is that a sea goddess is guiding and protecting a small boat through a rough and difficult journey across a stormy gray sea. My impression of this Sea Goddess is that she is peaceful, she’s in charge, calm and pure but strong. The boat is lost at sea, adrift and in big waves, and she’s guiding it to somewhere safe. I immediately wanted to make a ‘salty amber’ to represent the essence of this painting and this goddess. The saltiness of her waves, her naked body and hair were translated into light notes. The deep mysterious nature of what lay below the surface of the deep ocean is sensual and breathless and pulled me in and called for Amber. Laurent Le Guernec Laurent Le Guernec was born near Paris in January 1967. Inspired by his grandfather who was a craftsman and an artist, he decided to become a perfumer. After studying in France, he had the opportunity to move to the US to work for Fragrance Resources in 1991. Laurent’s perfumery has global appeal and is bright, crisp and precise. Currently, he is creating for IFF and collaborates with perfumers including Curve, Liz Claiborne, Elizabeth Arden, Marc Jacobs, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Mac. Perfume is Laurent’s way to help consumers to achieve their deepest wish, endless youth and sensuality. Visit Laurent Le Guernec's profile →
I can fly It is an inherited skill I wear a robin’s egg blue cape Flying fills me with adventure and joy Medium: Sculpture The film had a dream quality that I interpreted as a fairytale or a modernization of a Greek Myth. I looked at the video a number of times – making sure I was really seeing it. I studied it frame by frame to really look at the background and the objects. I tried to capture the tone and hold on to the dream quality . My first idea was a message in a bottle using all the writing I had done, then I made shoes out of imaginary maps – but both those ideas were too complicated so I went back to the story and settled on the bowl on wheels – like a crazy dream that makes sense but is a little off. My title is the first line in my writing. it’s about finding ways to extract oneself from situations and really find release. I imagined that is how the character in the video would have spent his time – daydreaming he was somewhere else. Sarah Hutt Sarah Hutt is a mixed media sculptor whose work focuses on memory, dreams and the ever-changing reality they create. She is a graduate of the Boston Museum School and winner of a 5th year Fellowship. She serves as a panelist, visiting artist and lecturer to numerous museums, galleries and organizations throughout the country. Sarah is the former Director of Visual Arts for the City of Boston. Now, in her capacity as a consultant she advocates creating economic opportunities for visual artists, coordinating temporary public art projects, and creating collaborations between individual artists and community organizations. Visit Sarah Hutt's profile →
Light and Shade Medium: Sculpture he strongest emotion arising from the video was the loneliness and sense of helplessness. I felt the concept of the video was an expression of two people feeling the same pain and loneliness but who are unable to reach out to each other. Perhaps they held the key to each other’s happiness but they led parallel lives. I watched the film a number of times and made a list of immediate responses, things like shadows, the color blue, out of reach, fish bowl, water, reflections, loneliness, raft, drifting off and helplessness. I started to think about ways I could connect the characters, obvious things like dropping a rope down to this drifting character, a ladder or steps of some sort. However the overriding concept of the film with her being real and him being animated suggested to me that they would never cross paths, they led parallel lives. I worked with some birch branches from a storm felled tree from my own garden. The wood has its own story and carries its own sadness. It was not ready to come down, a vibrant healthy tree unfortunately taken by the wind. The beautiful and evolving bark enabled me to color co-ordinate the steps from darkness to light, going from depths to greater heights. The feelings of sadness and separation are transient feelings that come and go, you need to the shade so you recognize how good the light feels when it comes, the light reminds you the darkness doesn’t last forever. Lee Borthwick From her East London workshop, Scots born installation artist Lee Borthwick has been creating custom natural artworks since 2009. After studying textile design at Grays School of Art in Aberdeen, Lee received a MA in constructed textiles from the Royal College of Art in 2008. She combines her love of wild landscapes with organic materials and hand construction techniques to create works that provide a tactile, reflective and poetic experience for the viewer. Visit Lee Borthwick's profile →
Exhale Medium: Fashion Design I connected immediately to the scent. It created an image of this breathtaking woman. She is walking into this white, warm, naturally lit room and everyone exhales at her presence. She’s this natural beauty. Confident but not aggressively so. I imagined her with wet hair and no make up. She says, “here I am. This is just me.” She is soft, crisp, sensual, and fresh. I created a dress in two pieces that drapes and wraps around the body. Carly Hampel Visit Carly Hampel's profile →
I Leave This Storm Behind Me Medium: Spacial Design This chain represented Uncertainty for me and yet it also elicited Hope. I felt that the art and pieces could be interpreted as very dark. There is lots of sea and fog and uncertainty. But one line in the song was “”I Leave This Storm Behind Me”” and I felt it was a way of seeing hope and the future even when things are unclear or dark. After opening the artwork I looked at images of all the pieces in the order in which they were all created while listening to the song. The textures on the walls came to me first and I started sketching shapes for the space and little floor plans too. I hope to have the lighting slowly change on the environment to speak to how I fee about the pieces of art and about change. Anthony Phelps Visit Anthony Phelps's profile →
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