Online auction: it's later than you think
Friendly reminder: you have less than a week to claim that artwork you’ve been eyeing all month. The Artist Trust online art sale closes on April 28th. And bidding shuts down at 10pm that night — not midnight, like many other deadlines — 10pm next Wednesday.
Also, I wasn’t kidding last week when I said my collages are “only going to get more expensive from here on out.” See for yourself: go visit my online shop. (And no, the IRS doesn’t allow artists to write off the final auction price as a business expense.) So the person who takes “Common Ground” home will be helping me help other Washington state artists. Happy shopping!
Art auction donation: "Minors"
Just a few more hours, and then this new artwork will be ready to go to the highest bidder.
You remember I took on the challenge of creating a piece of art to donate to a Seattle Children's Hospital fundraiser. Usually when I think of kids, I think of them playing. But the cigar box's sandy, almost gravelly texture made me think of grubby faces after a long day's work.
So I turned to this image of young coal mine workers from the Library of Congress. It's part of a photo collection from the early 1900s; the images were used in the fight to pass laws against child labor.
I incorporated iridescent beads as faux rock inclusions, at first imagining miners digging for these sparkling bits. I've since learned many child mine workers at the time were employed as "breaker boys," sorting out impurities by hand. Remember, these kids were between eight and twelve years old, and the job was hazardous even for adults.
If you'd like to help today's children, please consider bidding on this diorama assemblage and other pieces of art at the "Art ala Carte" auction. Details:
Not surprisingly, the title of this piece came to me right away: "Minors." Yes, it's a play on words, but it seemed important to go with it. The fact is, there are still children working in mines today, just not in the United States. I'm grateful my own children have never been in this kind of danger, and grateful for medical centers like Seattle Children's Hospital.
Keeping promises
Once I finished up the washboard-mounted altered book series, I cleaned up the studio a little and realized... oh yeah... I promised a piece of art to someone.
Volunteers from Preston Kuppe Guild gave me that intriguing cigar box, back at the Fall Best of the Northwest art festival last year.
Visitors to the 2015 Best of the Northwest art festival. ©Lisa Myers Bulmash
The guild raises money for Seattle Children's Hospital during their "Art a la Carte" auction. They've asked me and other festival artists to turn the boxes into artworks to be sold at the event. The rocky exterior texture is giving me some ideas...
... but I have to make it all happen in the next few days. Preferably over the weekend. Hoo boy... send me some encouragement to keep me going, won't you?