Monday, March 17, 2014

New In My Etsy Shop

Handmade Ceramic Birds  Set of 3  Brown and Blue  Folk Art Style
Bird Beads  Ceramic  in my Etsy shop
I blogged about these on Art Bead Scene here

Some new beads in my Etsy Shop.  Have been trying out different bead shapes, bolder toggle bars, urban style stains and glazes and a new leaf style.  Thanks so much for stopping by.

A Pair of Heart Pendants  Grunge Green and Dark Metallic Green   Leaf Pattern

Ceramic Hearts Urban Chic style  in my Etsy shop
Handmade Pendant Pasture Plant Leaves of Vetch Ceramic Clay Hand Painted

Pasture Leaves  by Mary Harding  in my Etsy Shop

Folded Bead Ceramic  and Bail  all in one   in my Etsy Shop
Handmade Rustic Ceramic Toggle Clasp Tomato Plant Budding  copper bar
Toggle Clasp Faded Blues  in my Etsy Shop

Handmade Rustic Stoneware Ceramic Clay  Toggle Clasp  Browns and Blue

Stoneware Toggle Clasp with bolder toggle bar in my  Etsy Shop

Heart Pendant Birch Leaf Rustic Style
Birch Leaf Heart Pendant in my Etsy Shop  

Handmade two hole Earthenware Ceramic Beads Green Rustic
Two Hole Beads in my Etsy Shop

Thursday, March 06, 2014

Inspired by Reading Book Club: The Enchantress of Florence and Difficult Loves



Andrew Thornton's Inspired By Reading Book Club  selection for January was The Enchantress of Florence by Salman Rushdie.  We  have doubled up for this month's blog hop and are also including the current selection for February Italo Calvino's Difficult Loves.  I found inspiration in both books but favored the charming slightly surreal stories of Italo Calvino in  Difficult Loves.  I had never read any of his stories, except the Fairy Tales, and was surprised and very pleased by their simplicity, charm and unusual imagery of bugs, sea creatures, and beautiful plants.



For today's blog hop I am sharing the necklace I made inspired by Salman Rushdie's The Enchantress of Florence.  I have found during this year of creating jewelry related to the books we have read, that what I choose to make often comes to me as an almost full blown vision when I come across a passage or idea in the story that "speaks to me."  I think these epiphanies are what make it so exciting to participate in this Book Club and undertake the reading of books I might never have chosen myself.  I was never sure it would happen in The Enchantress of Florence but persisted (due to my personal connections to Florence and Renaissance art), until I came across the following passage:

"According to legend the Medici family possessed a magic mirror whose purpose was to reveal to the reigning Duke the image of the most desirable woman  in the known world."
It seems that after some time the mirror no longer worked and "fell dark."  And then after the election of Pope Leo it began to work again. In order to find the beautiful woman revealed in the magic mirror, the famous painter Andrea Del Sarto was summoned by the reigning Duke to paint the likeness within the mirror, but it only reflected back  an image of the artist, as the mirror was not so easily tricked. 
The idea of Andrea Del Sarto's reflection in the mirror sparked the idea for me to make a  Florentine  Mirror with an image of one of Andrea Del Sarto's art works, since he is an actual painter from the Renaissance period.  When I looked him up, I was captivated by one of his chalk drawings of a young girl. I fitted a copy of the drawing into a shallow bezel cup that I had tinned to a piece of copper and made an ornate bail for, and then I poured resin into the bezel.
I used a simple Vintaj etched brass chain, added a couple of ornate copper beads from Fusion beads and a decorative oval toggle clasp that I made from copper clay to reflect the classic necklace style of the time and to focus attention on the marvelous image in the mirror.

                                                 The Mirror of Andrea Del Sarto Necklace        
                                                               The clasp


As I mentioned, Italo Calvino's short stories are charming and full of wonderful unexpected imagery and are often happy and pastoral in feeling.  I liked many of them but was captured by The Adventure of a Reader.  Funny and lighthearted, the story poses the question of what is more real and more desirable, the story or real life.  I have not yet finished my piece for this book but hope to at some point in the future.  

Thank you Andrew  for continuing the book club on into next year.  We have only 2 more selections for this year, March  is  An Irish Country Doctor by Patrick Taylor and April is The Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri.
Thank you for stopping by.  Since this is a blog hop I hope you will take a look at the wonderful creations of the other participants:

Raku Bead Video Part III