Finalist for Beautiful Bizarre Magazine's Yasha Young Projects Sculpture Award 2022

I’m very happy to announce that my piece CHAMBER XIX Bring the motherfucking ruckus was chosen as one of 25 finalists in Beautiful Bizarre Magazine’s Yasha Young Projects Sculpture Award 2022.

We have been BLOWN AWAY by the high standard of entries that we have received for the 2022 Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize! Thank you so much to everyone who has entered. As a small, independent publisher, it means a lot to us that the global artists community respects and values the Beautiful Bizarre Art Prize.

DANIJELA KRHA PURSSEY, CO-FOUNDER & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, BEAUTIFUL BIZARRE MAGAZINE

This piece was created in 2021 for my solo show Enter the 36 Chambers as one of 36 “emotional reliquaries”.
Each of the 36 pieces in this show was meant to be a “level” to be conquered, emotionally, and being in the middle of the bunch there are a handful of hard feelings to beat. The specific thoughts for this piece related to the iron maiden (the object, not the band.) As a kid I was always obsessed with medieval torture devices...I couldn't wrap my head around how people could do something like that to one another. The same goes for how people treat one another to this day, verbally, emotionally.

To see the full list of 25 finalists, please visit Yasha Young Projects Sculpture Award 2022: Finalists Announced


Up from the 36 Chambers...!

For the last year I’ve worked on a series for my newest solo exhibition “Enter the 36 Chambers” and it his made of of 36 one of a kind pieces…each a training “Chamber” like in the Shaw Brother’s film “The 36th Chamber of Shaolin”, but if it were for your emotions.

Below is the artist statement I wrote for this work:

Part “The 36th Chamber of Shaolin” and part “Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)”, Enter the 36 Chambers is a series of sculptural emotional portraits that focus on the path to self discovery, and the heart and the battle that it takes to get there.

This series has roots in many things but discovery of self, challenging your thoughts, and emotional growth are at the core, with the story being told through dead birds, found objects and various references to Wu-tang lyrics and Shaw brothers movies, among other things. 

Art is funny. You don’t have to like Wu-Tang Clan or Shaw Brothers Kung Fu movies or even dead birds to find something in this series that might resonate with you. Those things are just starting points, lenses through which a story is being told. When you look at them, you may see them in different ways entirely. For me they are emotional portraits, or a sculpture of a feeling, and I want that to be universal so that anyone can feel it and in their own way.

I use dead birds as a vehicle because they are vulnerable and beautiful. You want to protect them, despite the worst being over. I think looking back at emotions can be a bit like that. You’ve already felt them...it’s over, they’re gone. Yet we sit with them and obsess, relive, dissect or reimagine them. I think the best thing for me is to learn from them and move forward... but I also feel that is a struggle, a daily battle to not dissect what I felt and why.

Enter the 36 Chambersis about mastering emotions... the idea being that as you are working through these emotions, each represented as a Chamber, you eventually get to a place of peace, or at very least the ability to find calm and stillness even when there isn’t any.

You can see this exhibition online HERE at Antlerpdx.com

All 36 pieces before they were sent off to Antler Gallery in Portland, OR

All 36 pieces before they were sent off to Antler Gallery in Portland, OR

Make F*cking Art: A challenge to you in uncertain times...

Feeling helpless doesn’t sit well with me and yet it has been hard to not feel that way daily with the current state of things. Don’t get me wrong, socially isolating is something I’ve been doing my whole life, however seeing people suffer on such a large scale is paralyzing. But art and likeminded people have helped me through many a time before and this is no different in that respect. So friend, amazing artist and fellow PAFA faculty member Maria Teicher (@Mariateicher on Instagram) and I have paired up to push ourselves and others to do what we do best : Make F*cking Art.

Darla Jackson, All my failures (Aren’t they lovely?)

Darla Jackson, All my failures (Aren’t they lovely?)

WHAT YOU NEED

You will not need anything other than a willingness to participate and whatever your medium(s) of choice is/are. Feel free to use traditional materials or to push the limits entirely and work in nontraditional materials, whatever is available to you.

WHAT TO DO

Our challenge to you is to follow the prompts below and make a corresponding artwork every 2-3 days. Every two weeks we will release a new list.

MARCH 23RD - APRIL 6TH

-Botanicals

-Animal Self

-Self Portrait As Community

-Comfort Beverage

-What Lies Beneath

-Self Portrait As Alter Ego

-Impressions

Participate as you are able. Post your work to Instagram and label it with #mariaanddarlasayMFA so we see it. Check out the hashtag in order to support other artists taking part.

OFFICIAL HASHTAG

#mariaanddarlasayMFA

SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL HASHTAGS

#makefuckingart #mfachallenge #artchallenge #quarantineart #stayhomestudio #artonline


Make what feels right. Connect with your community. Find new people. Make f*cking art. We can’t wait to see what you come up with.

Maria Teicher

Maria Teicher

EMOTIONAL Alchemy

There are things I do in my work that I’m not always aware of immediately. There are things I try to do…ideas I hold close while working on a piece, hoping that it seeps in, just a little bit. The combination of this intention and surprise is where I like it to end best. Having every aspect of a series or a piece planned out isn’t as interesting to me as the continued discovery is.
What I’m working on now is the idea of failure. I’ve had some royal screw ups in my life, and despite it all I try to move forward a better person. I dissect my missteps, look hard at my bad decisions and wrestle every lesson I can out of each one of my failures. This causes transformation…emotional alchemy…makes something beautiful out of something that is not.
This is what I’m looking for. The idea that each failure, while it’s still there in the past, changes me for the better. I’ve decided to show this through a series of dead bird sculptures. Dead birds have been part of my work for a long time, as I’ve always loved recording the beauty that I saw despite it feeling sad. This recording causes it to live on…isn’t art just trying to give permanence to a feeling? An idea?
Each day, every day I’m choosing a bird to sculpt that represents this transformation from a failure to a lesson. Each piece in this series “All my failures (Aren’t they lovely?)” will be a one of a kind piece, which isn’t typical for me. Traditionally I make molds and cast, allowing for an edition of each piece, or multiples. However the idea that each of these failures happened once and was moved on from after the lesson was learned is important here, so each piece will be unique.

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A long overdue Weekly Update

Well hello there. I've been toying with the idea of firing up a blog again for a while. It looks like the last ditch efforts were an actual post on my old blog from 2015 and a sad half finished draft post here from 2016. I read back over the entire "old blog" and while most of it spans from 2009-2012  (with a few attempts at starting it up again in 2013, 2014 AND 2015) I found that despite my life being drastically different now, my intent to share information about sculpture processes was there even then.
For those of you who don't know me, and have never read my old blog, I am a sculptor living and working in Philadelphia. I create primarily animal sculpture, working in clay towards pieces that then will have molds made of them and be cast in plasters, resins, and sometimes bronze. My work tends to have a duality to it... cute but dark, funny but sad, strange but true. Each piece is about human emotion and I feel like people can look at these different "feelings" however is most comfortable to them. The animals generally make these ideas more accessible, but I always have seen the animals as stand ins for humans...shadows of us. 
In addition to sculpting, I teach sculpture at PA Academy of the Fine Arts, Stockton University and Fleisher Art Memorial. I also do commission work for various artists and companies in and around Philadelphia (and beyond). My family consists of my 8.5 year old daughter, Olivia, who is turning out to be a pretty great human and Paul Romano, my boyfriend, who is an incredible painter and designer. I have one cat at home named Sweetie Bird and the studio cat is Victoria. You'll meet them all I'm sure. 
My idea here, this time around, is to focus on the why and the how of what I'm making. I talked a lot last time about what I was making and sometimes got into the reasons why and how it was done. But those things are definitely so much more important to me now.  I also love the idea of this blog as a "public sketchbook", or a place that offers more insight into my world than sites like Instagram and Facebook do. I'm looking for more depth than those other platforms have to offer, I suppose. So hi, and I look forward to adding more soon.

This is me working on a piece for Arch Enemy Art's June 2018 exhibition As Above, So Below II

This is me working on a piece for Arch Enemy Art's June 2018 exhibition As Above, So Below II