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Archive for July, 2010

"Ovation" In progress……..

July 28th, 2010 Tom Haney No comments

My latest commission is a music box of sorts. When you lift the lid, a figure on a stage pops up and the sound of applause is heard. Here is my rough sketch of the piece……

When I first talked with the woman who requested this piece I was not sure what her budget or size constraints were. Initially I envisioned a grandiose, elaborate, and much larger piece. I imagined a moving figure, operated by strings or rods connected to a motor, popping up, illuminated by stage lights. After some consultation we scaled it back to what you see here, (she wanted it to fit on a bookshelf).
This piece is more like what she had in mind.

Here are my in progress shots, in order—-

I took apart this old crate and used the wood for my box….

My box with lid……

The hinge that enables the stage to swing upwards….

After drawing out how this piece was going to operate, I had exposed linkages on either side of the stage that I thought were very distracting (ugly). I had an idea to make them decorative, to make them look like they belong there. They work to pull the stage up when you lift the lid.

The stage showing the 2 post that act as connector rods.

The stage connected to the lid with the linkages…

Cutting the linkages…

Linkages cut out and ready for finishing…

Finished linkages. My idea was to make them look sort of like ropes.

The figure’s legs and shoes. The figure needs to be well-built because when the lid is closed she rest at a 22 degrees angle.

That is where I’m at today. I will post more pics later.

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,

A party of one

July 27th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

In 2007 while working as artist in residence at the San Francisco dump I made what would become one of my favorite pieces. Alcohologram (see below) sadly, was destroyed in transit to a client due to sloppy packing by a gallery and the kind of violence that only UPS can inflict on packages.

Praying Mantis comes home to Ripley’s Believe it or Not San Francisco

July 27th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

A while back I had the good fortune to sell my giant Praying Mantis sculpture to the Ripley’s Believe it or Not museum franchise. I crated and shipped the sculpture off to their headquarters in Florida and made peace with perhaps never seeing it again. Well, last night was the grand re-opening of the Ripley’s museum in San Francisco and wouldn’t you know it, my Mantis is back!

Machinations review at Visual Art Source

July 27th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

There is a nice little review of “Machinations” over at Visual Art Source.com by Cherie Louise Turner.

Photos from Machinations at 5 Claude Lane

July 27th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

Last week was the opening reception for “Machinations” a group show featuring myself, Jeremy Mayer, and Benjamin Cowden (shown below left to right) at 5 Claude Lane Gallery in San Francisco. I’ll attach a few photos of the event here, but be sure and visit my MobileMe gallery to see them all.
If you missed the opening we will be having an informal artists talk at the gallery Tuesday August 3rd at 6 pm.

Photos and Press from Art at the Dump Anniversary show

July 27th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

Last week the San Francisco Dump’s artist in residence program celebrated its 20th anniversary with a big retrospective exhibition. It was a great looking show, and the house was packed with eager viewers. Below is a slideshow of the event. Scroll down for a write up that appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle the following day. Naturally I’m pleased with their choice of image, thats my Impala piece from when I was in residence there in 2007.

Rocket Stop – base in progress

July 27th, 2010 Alan No comments

image

Here’s a quick shot of the base of the Rocket Stop which we just got assembled.

Great review of “Machinations” at 5 Claude Lane…

July 26th, 2010 Jeremy No comments



Great review of “Machinations” at 5 Claude Lane gallery in San Francisco, CA. Work by Nemo Gould, Ben Cowden, and me. Review by Cherie Turner for Visual Art Source LINK. More details at http://5claudelane.com

Rocket Stop Fabrication 2

July 25th, 2010 Alan No comments

Interview on Make Blog

July 25th, 2010 Alan No comments

If you missed it Make blog did a nice interview with me regarding my affiliation with Applied Kinetic Arts.  I’ve reposted the text below.  You should also go check out the interviews they did with Nemo, Ben and Jeremy.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve been doing a series of interviews with members of Applied Kinetic Arts (AKA), “a community of artists working within the medium loosely defined as ‘kinetic’. Works incorporating motion, light, sound, and interactivity are represented by the group’s ever expanding member base.” The more members I chat with, the more I’m impressed and moved by their sense of camaraderie. The talented folks who make up AKA are not just a group of artists, but they are a community in the true sense. Today, we speak with Alan Rorie. I first met Alan a couple of years ago at Maker Faire Bay Area, where I saw his Neuron Chamber (pictured above) for the first time. The steel and glass sculpture demonstrates the firing of neurons in the human brain, and I approached Alan to give him an editor’s blue ribbon for the project. He immediately smiled and said, “We won!” The “we” naturally meant the collective and he was eager to share with the crew. The vibe these folks create is inspiring.

1. Tell us about yourself. How did you get started making things and who are your inspirations?
I started making things when I was in graduate school at Stanford working on my Ph.D. in neurobiology. Although the work was really interesting I found it unsatisfying. So much of it was in the abstract; I was interested in the physical world, but in science you begin in the physical world but you end up in abstraction. I wanted to work more with actual physical objects, so I decided to get more involved with making things. There were always things I wanted to do but couldn’t because I didn’t have access, like welding, but when I went to Burning Man I found a community of local people involved in making crazy stuff, and doing awesome metalwork, so I became involved with them and slowly taught myself how to weld. A lot of the people in that community were my inspirations, particularly Kinetic Steam Works, and my fellow member of AKA, Nemo Gould. It’s an honor to now to be able to work alongside a lot of the people who inspired me to get involved with this kind of stuff to begin with.

2. How did you first become involved/interested in making kinetic art? Tell us about the first kinetic piece you made.
As soon as I started making things, I wanted to make kinetic art because I’m very interested in engineering and design. I was also drawn to the inherent challenges of making a kinetic piece — something that functioned in interesting ways. I was always interested in industrial components like bearings, so kinetic art was natural for me to get involved with. My first kinetic piece was The Triaparator for the Steampunk Treehouse, which was a series of three fully functional brass apertures.

3. What goes into building one of your pieces? What’s your process?
My process is generally the same. I begin by doing hand sketches and brainstorming. Then I move into computer-aided design, which I love. I get as far as I can in CAD. From there, I migrate the piece into the real world. Once it becomes a part of the real world, I abandon the CAD model and work with what I’ve got. Often there are huge sections of a piece that can’t be CADed and need to be done afterwards, and I really enjoy that tension between what can be predesigned and what needs to be made and designed on the fly.

4. What’s the biggest challenge in making art that is kinetic?
Not figuring out to solve kinetic problems, but how to solve kinetic problems within the aesthetic constraints that you’re working with. Most kinetic problems have simple solutions, but often those solutions conflict with the aesthetic look of the piece. As an artist, you have to re-solve a lot of traditional kinetic problems in interesting ways. The hardest thing is getting the motion of kinetics you want, while having it look the way you want.

5. What’s your favorite tool/material?

The milling machine. It gives you a large amount of freedom to do interesting things with a tremendous amount of precision.

6. How has being a part of a collective like Applied Kinetic Arts helped you and/or informed your work?
It’s provided me with a group of like-minded people, peers, from whom I can draw inspiration, advice, and information. Camaraderie. Being a part of a large, collaborative projects like the ones we do in Five Ton Crane(The Steampunk Treehouse and The Raygun Gothic Rocketship), has really helped me to create work I could never create alone, and to share in a collective artistic vision.

7. Is your art strictly a hobby or is it a business? Does it relate to your day job?
It’s both. I think it’s important to consider the business aspects of art. Artists deserve to get paid for their time. Certainly there’s a tremendous amount of management of money involved for shop rent, consumables, and tools that you need to factor in. I’ve never thought of my art as a hobby. Since I started it’s always been what I want to do with all of my time, and I’ve spent the past couple of years working hard to make a living doing it, and that’s a work in progress.

I teach metal fabrication classes, so in that my art is directly related to my living. And this winter I’ll be expanding to do more custom design and fabrication. In the context of considering myself an industrial artist, I’m also interested in the process of producing objects en mass for sale, and harnessing the tools of production and industry to create art. For example, my wooden and papercraft models of the Raygun Gothic Rocketship (for sale in theMakers Market). It’s been interesting figuring out how to make those in enough number and quality to sell.

8. What new idea (in or outside of your field) has excited you most recently?
I’m really excited by the continued development of CAD/CAM and the growing accessibility to 3D printing and scanning. Also, the possibility of microbial life on Europa, a moon of Jupiter.

9. What is your motto?
Less think, more build. Another one: It’s always easier to make a hole bigger than smaller.

10. What advice do you have for people who want to get started in the kinetic arts?
Start looking around at all the objects around you, from doorknobs and lamps to drawbridges and cranes. Inspiration for interesting kinetic movements is everywhere. Start doing things. Keep things simple. Follow your interests. Use lots of lube.

Thanks, Alan! To check out more images and videos of Alan’s work, head over to his site Almost Scientific.

"Trundle" 2010 New Figure….

July 22nd, 2010 Tom Haney No comments

Many of my pieces, especially my Figures, deal with the idea of the power of the human spirit to overcome adversity. This piece is no exception. I love his optimism- he has a sense that “nothing is going to slow me down”. This piece is SOLD.

His wrench rests on his shoulder. I took a while to figure out the angles to make this happen.

His back, showing the hand stitching.

His carved wooden hands. I carved the hands separately and added them to the arms using glue and a bit of brass rod.

His body pre-paint and pre-assembly. The wheel is an antique pulley, I added a “tire” made from an old electrical cord. His head, sculpted from polymer clay, was painted when I painted the previous figure’s head.

The box I used for the base was found at a flea market in Maryland, or was it Delaware?

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,

Video tour of my studio

July 22nd, 2010 baronaaron No comments

Loveland studio workbench Video tour of my studio

"When Things Just Mesh" has sold!

July 18th, 2010 Tom Haney No comments

I will post another new figure soon…….

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,

Jacob Epstein, Rock Drill, (Reconstruction by Ken Cook and Ann…

July 17th, 2010 Jeremy No comments



Jacob Epstein, Rock Drill, (Reconstruction by Ken Cook and Ann Christoper RA after the dismantled original), 1913-15, Polyester resin, metal and wood 205 x 141.5 cm

From the Royal Academy of Art Magazine, the article “In Search of Wild Things”, written by Richard Cork:

“Epstein may first have decided to make this immensely daring tour de force while watching men and machines cutting stone in a quarry. He later recalled: ‘My ardour for machinery (short-lived) expended itself upon the purchase of an actual drill, second-hand, and upon this I made and mounted a machine-like robot, visored, menacing, and carrying within itself its progeny, protectively ensconced. Here is the armed, sinister figure of today and tomorrow.’”

Read the article here.

Newest figure….

July 16th, 2010 Tom Haney No comments



This is my first attempt at creating a head that is more of a caricature. I think want to take my work in this new direction. I love the way he turned out. This piece is titled “When Things Just Mesh” and is $395.

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,

Rocket Stop Fabrication 1

July 16th, 2010 Alan No comments

The Rocket Stop fabrication is in full swing!

Setup for my latest show with Benjamin Cowden and Nemo Gould at…

July 15th, 2010 Jeremy No comments



Setup for my latest show with Benjamin Cowden and Nemo Gould at 5 Claude Lane Gallery in San Francisco.

new work: "Ganesha – Remover of Obstacles"

July 10th, 2010 Jud Turner No comments



“Ganesha – Remover of Obstacles”
found objects, welded steel, glass lenses, antique glass doorknob
90″ x 36″ x 22″

Ganesha on wikipedia
Jud Turner.com

part of my ongoing series of using symbols from the world’s religious traditions to suggest that recycling (found objects in this case) is a shared spiritual value. Here’s an earlier exploration of same:

Chapel wall at BRING

Categories: Jud Turner Tags: ,

Beer Can Leslie Speaker

July 9th, 2010 CTP No comments

Where to begin….?

For starters, if you don’t know what a Leslie Speaker is, click here, then come back.

Over at Beavis Audio Research (one of my favorite places for circuits, effects, amps, oscillators, and sonic glee and madness) he has tried to build a rotating speaker using a beer can.

Why would one try to do this? I’m not going to comment on that because I do dumb crap too, all the time, in the name of science…otherwise known as just killing time and keeping my brain out of trouble.

Group show in S.F. July 22

July 9th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

I’m very pleased to announce a three person show opening at 5 Claude Lane Gallery in San Francisco on Thursday July 22 from 6-9 pm. I’ll be showing along side my good friends and fellow Applied Kinetic Arts members, Jeremy Mayer and Benjamin Cowden. I will have my new pieces “Albert” and “Drill Baby Drill” on display along with a few old favorites.
I’ve made a Facebook Event if you’d like to RSVP.
There will also be an artists talk at the gallery on Tuesday August 3rd at 6pm.

appliedkineticarts: rrrick: (via onestbien)

July 9th, 2010 Jeremy No comments

Three new pieces added to portfolio

July 9th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

I realize that I just posted the piece above as “in process”, but I’m pleased to say it is now finished and properly documented. The title is “Albert”, named after the early monkeys used in the American Space Program.
Also posted is “Drill Baby Drill”, my Narwal inspired sculpture. As well as another entry into my ever growing Octopus family: “Deep Blue”.
Click the titles or images of each piece to be taken to its corresponding page. Scroll down this page for video.

Final video of “Albert”

July 9th, 2010 Nemo No comments

A tribute to Americas monkeys in space.

Albert 2010 (11″ x 10″ x 7″) from Nemo Gould on Vimeo.

Final Video of “Drill Baby Drill”.

July 9th, 2010 Nemo 1 comment

Diavolino – New Arduino Clone

July 8th, 2010 CTP No comments

Just when I wondered if the world needed yet another Arduino clone, along comes one that I actually need. It comes unsoldered, which is great for end use versatility. It has the usual Arduino connector footprint so will work with shields. It doesn’t have USB on board which saves money and height. It’s red and has flames (of course that’s a selling point for me – YMMV) All that for $13! This is pretty sweet.

From the EMSL site:
Diavolino (“little devil”) is a low-cost, easy to build Arduino-compatible development board.

Diavolino has the form factor of an Arduino Duemilanove or Arduino Pro, but with nicely rounded corners and a striking appearance.

It’s a low-profile through-hole version, with a simplified design. It’s based on a ATmega328P microcontroller, and comes pre-flashed with the Arduino bootloader. Open source design, with bare basics hardware.”

Go buy one by clicking here.

A successful adventure…….

July 7th, 2010 Tom Haney No comments

Last Saturday I ventured west of Atlanta in search of more old boxes for my Story Boxes. I found 6 great boxes and many other good things…

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,

Rocket Stop Design Drawings

July 7th, 2010 Alan No comments

Fabrication of the Rocket Stop should be gearing up over the next week.  Here are the most recent CAD images:

Recent article in Oakland Magazine

July 7th, 2010 Jeremy No comments



Recent article in Oakland Magazine

"The Nature of Commodity" and July shows

July 6th, 2010 Jud Turner No comments



“The Nature of Commodity”
June 2010
18″ x 25″ x 4″ (wall hanging, frame not shown)
mixed media assemblage

My latest assemblage sculpture was created for the “Objectophilia” show, which opened June 30, 2010 in Denver, CO. The show is sponsored by the Denver Museum of Contemporary Art, and is part of the city-wide Denver Biennial of the Americas. I was out there for the opening, and it was a wonderful spectacle – at least 1000 people, a fire/robot performance by the “motomen” and a guerrilla marching band called the “Boba-Fet players”. Also work by 30+ artists which addressed the theme of objects, and our culture’s obsession with things.

The show is up until July 25. Stop by if you’re in the area:

Objectophilia Blog
Objectophilia Facebook page

Also in July, I am in a group show at the Compound Gallery in downtown Portland, OR called “Pedal Power”. 3 of my cycle themed sculptures are on display until August 1:

Compound Gallery

Categories: Jud Turner Tags: ,

Space Monkey in process

July 5th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

I’m pleased to announce another new piece on the way. This one will commemorate the first monkey in space: Albert II. The poor bugger never made it back to earth alive and he deserves a memorial.
This piece will be the latest entry in my series of boxes. Similar to the previous “Drill Baby Drill” piece, this one is viewed through a brass portal window.

Small Commissions

July 5th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

I recently did a couple of small commissions for some offices of subsidiary branches of the the San Francisco Dump (Recology). I thought I would share the results here. The Octopus piece shown above (“Deep Blue”) is still currently unclaimed, so if you are interested in it please contact me. The piece below (“Sturgeon General”) has found a home and is no longer available.

Photos from solo installation at 555 12th street Oakland

July 5th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

A few weeks back I had a solo installation at the Oakland Museum of California’s off site venue: 555 12th Street. Well, I’ve finally gotten around to putting up a photo gallery. Click here to see it.

20 year anniversary exhibit from S.F. Dump Artist in Residence Program

July 5th, 2010 www.nemomatic.com No comments

I’ve posted before about the San Francisco Dump Artist in Residency Program. One of my favorite things about the San Francisco Bay area in fact. Well, this illustrious program is now 20 years old, and to celebrate they are putting on a big retrospective exhibition. The reception will be Wednesday July 21st from 6-8 pm. The show will run July 21 to September 25 and is free to the public. As if this all weren’t enough to entice you, they have also produced a book including each artist from all the years of the programs existence, for sale at the reception.
Location: Intersection 5M, 925 Mission Street @ 5th St. San Francisco CA 94103
This event has also been added to my Calendar.
See below for the full press release.

Video of Aaron’s Art Lab Opening July 2nd 2010

July 3rd, 2010 baronaaron No comments

Thank you Speed Whiskers!!!!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtopWAkSNV8

Show of New Works Announced……

July 1st, 2010 Tom Haney No comments


I’m very excited to announce my show of new kinetic works at Obsolete in Venice, CA
The opening is Saturday November 13, 2010
I will be bringing as many pieces as I can, plus a few surprises……
See info here soon…..

Categories: Tom Haney Tags: ,