| Making art and music at home feeds you something
special in the same way that making a good meal out of real food
and sharing it with your family nourishes you better than
something that comes right out of a can. Canned music and canned
food.... it's probably not all that tasty. But it is right there
and ready for easy ingestion. For some people that's plenty, for
some its a feast, God love 'em.
Others are compelled to that extra effort that makes
something special out of bits and pieces, whether it requires
chopped up vegetables for the soup and salad and
fresh baked bread, or the hours of practice that go into
being able to play an instrument.
And
then there's mosaic art, the kind that requires hundreds and
thousands of pieces, each considered and chosen, each placed in
a pattern and then glued into place.
Just collecting the bits and beads and polymer clay,
telephone wire, vintage Art Deco era glass tiles and lapis
stones that are in Bryan
Helm's Blue Glass Guitar was a time consuming job, and he
also makes music--and
often dinner. Bryan has covered several guitars,
violins, a banjo and other items. His mosaic pieces showcase a
love of pattern texture, color, and a techno-tribal
decorative sensibility. |
|

People often ask "Is that guitar still playable?". They
aren't--and they were unplayable before being re-made into visual
art. Bryan collects broken instruments and uses them as base forms
in his work. The curves lines, and precise shapes of an instrument
are beautiful in themselves. Add paint, glitter, polymer clay
tiles, Pearl-X mica powders, seed beads, bugle beads, and glass,
colored copper wire coils blue pearls, along with blue telephone
wire for the strings, and this guitar sings without playing a
note.



Click here for more about the Blue
Glass Guitar |