For anyone who still checks this, I've moved to a new website below:
http://kimberlyshaffer.wixsite.com/home
Feel free to browse around there, and drop me a line!
- K.
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November 18, 2016
December 09, 2013
Sleeping on Planes
I'm getting back into tablet drawing and it feels good. Currently working 2.5 jobs, and definitely need the art for balance.
Even though the blinding-white noise on airplanes makes it hard to sleep, I seriously miss traveling right now.
October 28, 2013
Buggy Origami
For my station, I taught kids how to make origami true bugs. This is the "sucking" bug group which includes bed bugs, water bugs, cicadas, and garden pests such as leafhoppers and aphids.
Along with a fun chance to interact with all sorts of kids in Halloween costumes (Buzz Lightyears and vampires abounded!), this was great drawing practice.
I wrote and illustrated all of the materials distributed in my class, including this bookmark. I printed it out in neon cardstock, as well as white for the littlest tots to color in lieu of folding origami.
And as my first (super fun!) origami instruction project, I drafted up the pages below, too.
Feel free to print out (download links below images) and use as you like!
Bookmark
(download)
I wrote and illustrated all of the materials distributed in my class, including this bookmark. I printed it out in neon cardstock, as well as white for the littlest tots to color in lieu of folding origami.
And as my first (super fun!) origami instruction project, I drafted up the pages below, too.
Feel free to print out (download links below images) and use as you like!
Bookmark
(download)
Origami True Bug Instructions
(download)
October 14, 2013
True buggy bugs and other art projects
A sketch.
Lately I've been buuusy! School's done, and work is piling up. I'm buckling down for the winter but in spare moments working on:
- enamel earrings (I have a kiln, hallelujah!)
- leatherwork (tooling buttery smooth leather is a dream)
- a little bit of digital illustration for biology outreach programs (e.g. a "bad bug" exhibit for Halloween)
and
- large ceramic bowls for Empty Bowls, a charity event for fighting hunger.
I'm turning 100 pounds of porcelain into giant blue-and-white illustrated bowls.
Illustrations will likely involve monsters, robots, and bugs.
Look for progress pictures soon.
:)
June 23, 2013
Quail
If you're lucky out here, you can spot these whizzing across the road in single file, or hear them cawing to each other across the mountains.
Also, I am a fan of birds with bouncy hats like these.
April 20, 2013
Return for Art and Science
It's been a long time.. but I'm excited to be back!
The past 9 months have been filled with hard work in graduate school, and in 2 weeks I'll be receiving a business master's degree!! So excited to graduate, and put all that knowledge to good use.
Bonus illustration: sketched this based on a vintage photograph of a geisha, with extra botanical details added in for good measure.
More, mostly digital illustrations to come!
June 10, 2012
Woodburning and Music
Update: NEW ALBUM!
This is a multi-year collaboration between my friend Mike Granger, myself and several Austinites. Give it a listen!
This is a multi-year collaboration between my friend Mike Granger, myself and several Austinites. Give it a listen!
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Thanks to my friends Chris and Melissa, I am the proud owner of a woodburning tool!
I've picked it up fairly easily-- it writes like a pen and makes my workroom smell like winter. Which makes a nice escape because this time of year in Phoenix, you step outside and instantly burst into flames. If anything, it's a good reminder to wear sunblock.
Here we go..
Burning in the outline:
(the zombie is for a different project)
And filled with acrylic glazes:
Pine panels, acrylic, wood stain. 3.5 x 5.5"
Inspiration: the blinking lights atop South Mountain that I see from my backyard)
Another outline:
And more color:
In conclusion, I sort of love woodburning. Expect to see more in future posts.
And don't forget to pick up some nifty new music here:
Thanks!
--Kim--
Ptarmigan Party Pendant
It's been a whirlwind month, filled with lots of goodbyes (friends leaving for the summer), plenty of work, and lots of plans for more art collaborations here in Phoenix!
Here's one of the last pieces I was able to finish before the end of my spring jewelry class.
It's a copper and leather pendant which doubles as a bottle opener for my friend Peter, scientist-artist-musician extraordinaire who is researching ants with the Smithsonian this summer in Panama. He's the guy behind this band which you should definitely listen to: http://ptarmigan.bandcamp.com/
My parting gift:
Leather and copper; acid-etched, pierced, domed, soldered, with patina.
and Peter:
Party pendants are serious business.
And so is his music. Seriously, check it out. I don't know one person who doesn't love the stuff.
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April 24, 2012
'NSex Opening Night
At long last, here are photos from
the collaborative art and science show I helped with earlier this year.
Next Wednesday we will be attending a reception at the Arizona Science Center
to celebrate the first annual Arizona Science and Technology Festival!
All pieces were hand-formed with paperclay, underglaze, and low-fire clear glaze. After firing, they were carefully mounted and hung onto a scaffold we build from salvaged desert wood.
(one of the informational blurbs we mounted on stands and placed around the sculpture)
The artist-scientist-sculptors:
Left to right: Joshua Gibson, Kimberly Shaffer, Morgan MacCallum, David Bradley, Brett Seymoure (top), Lisa Taylor (bottom), and Peter Marting
April 21, 2012
Silverwork. 2
Rings, sterling silver, 2012.
Clockwise from top left:
1. Saint-Exupéry inspired
2. Mobius
3. Hammered
4. Lost wax cast
Excuse the dry hands, I've been pulling weeds and gardening in the heat a whole lot recently!
April 08, 2012
April 02, 2012
Experiments in Jewelry: Part 1
I've decided to try out jewelry-making this year and am loving it!
It encompasses so many things I like about art -- complete creative freedom and learning new, exciting processes. This year I've taken several classes and learned acid-etching, lost-wax casting, piercing, and a tiny bit of enameling.
The chemistry and physics (acid and fire!) and preciseness of it all, as well as the potential for lovely handmade gifts, have me hooked.
To make sure I have the basics of assembly down, I've been making necklaces for family and friends. I can definitely use as much practice as possible with wire-wrapping, coordinating colors, attaching clasps and spacers and clamps.
Here's one necklace made for a cousin, using glass beads, vintage wood beads, and brass:
I'm really looking forward to using my own images in jewelry, though. Remember the paper cut-out of the rabbit I did in January? (it's below)
The original is large -- about 10 inches long -- and very delicate. It's been tucked away into a drawer where the battering of life can't reach it.
But I can still enjoy the image! After a bit of digital updating to shrink it down to a 1-inch square then acid-etching it into copper, I now have a rabbit pendant.
It should last for ages without breaking!
In the months to come, I'll be experimenting much more with acid-etching, more elaborate piercing and enameling, and forming pieces into three dimensions by hammering, soldering, and bending.
I'll have to strike a balance between starry-eyed wonder at all the possibilities, and the elbow grease and band-aids inevitably involved when sanding, sawing, and filing..
For the bug-lovers: I'm still working on ant research on the side, and plan to use plenty of insect images in my jewelry work, too!
A cidada pendant, for good measure:
Until later,
Kim
(And a song for the send-off: the Canadian band Little Scream has a lovely piece titled "Heron and the Fox" here: http://www.myspace.com/officiallittlescream)
February 17, 2012
Sound and Light
Two porcelain pieces..
Flower bell. Porcelain, copper, coral bead. 2012
Luminaria. Hand thrown and carved porcelain. 2011.
The candle-holder holds one comfortably nested tea light, and when it does, the whole thing glows gently and sends flickering dots onto the walls.
The first was a gift to a friend, but I couldn't bear to part with the second. It's still one of my favorite pieces!
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