Denis Hopking Dendog Art

Denis Hopking Dendog Art SCULPTURE CERAMICS PAINTING

Seven Imaginarium N**e Studies : White Acrylic on Black PaperThese gestural studies of the female n**e allow the image t...
13/12/2020

Seven Imaginarium N**e Studies : White Acrylic on Black Paper

These gestural studies of the female n**e allow the image to dance in the imagination

All are signed and numbered

The series is for sale as a whole
Please DM me for details

The Inseparable Trio: One Sculptural Expression
01/12/2020

The Inseparable Trio: One Sculptural Expression

01/12/2020

Post reduction...
cleaning off the residue carbon...
revealing the astounding other-worldly script...
in bold contrast to the black body of the vessel...
A gift from the kiln,
the fire,
the glaze,
the clay body,
the smokey air,
the water
and this hand
and person
happening to be involved in the process...

01/12/2020

The moment of truth... what is under the reduction chamber bins?

Raku firing yesterday... I haven’t done a firing for three weeks and I was sort of avoiding it because I hadn’t reached ...
01/12/2020

Raku firing yesterday... I haven’t done a firing for three weeks and I was sort of avoiding it because I hadn’t reached the top of the hill...

I was still climbing, experiencing and feeling disappointment because I was having too many failures - in the clay response: cracking, in colour: insipid and no crackles

So I took a bold step, perhaps even a confident step into a new endeavour: fire up four of my better vessels: they have a grogged body, cutting edge design, shape and form

I wanted to use just two glazes - infact I used three
I wanted to glaze them simply with an ever thickening surface - yes I was pushing the limits for this glaze but
I wanted to achieve crackle and texture

So I had two hours to fire the little dustbin kiln up and get the melt required

At temperature I saw the winged vase shiny and smooth - ready to use the tongs

But the thicker glazed vessels were notably bumpy and yet melting...
I continued to raise the temperature to make sure this glaze would acquire a good melt...

Once I was sure it had melted sufficiently but knew this glaze had in a sense crawled into distinctive patterning I made the decision to pull them out and reduce them under buckets

I left them overnight ... played comp tennis... caught six cane toads... and went to sleep...

In the morning I unpacked the pots...

It was a welcome relief : first, that they had not cracked and second that the glaze looked ok...

Until I cleaned off the carbon residue

Then I realised what the fire had given me as a gift...

The vessels were turning out with a unique pattern achieved from the thick overlay of glaze which had surreptitiously and with equal serendipity ‘crawled’ into forms intuited by fire meeting clay meeting minerals...

No one can do this!

Very often this is a ceramic glaze fault which is unsightly and relegating the pot as a second...

But what here was achieved was achieved on three different vessels and on different sides of the artwork...

The vessels were more than a family

they were a tribe: a matriarch with her two offspring

These will go on show at the December-January Kyogle Regional Exhibition... there is nothing quite like seeing artwork in real space, time and perspectives...

Thanks for reading my little story 🔥🏺🦋
Some videos will be shown on the next post

22/11/2020

A rather obvious article and research on how to get your artwork more widely seen, appreciated and possibly well known - viz a wide social network will help
Take a read....

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Creativity
Study Finds Artists Become Famous through Their Friends, Not the Originality of Their Work
Casey Lesser
Feb 27, 2019 5:36pm
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Entourage, New York
Steve Schapiro
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Entourage, New York
Fahey/Klein Gallery
Contact for price
In a 2012 exhibition about the birth of abstraction at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, curators highlighted the way that the artists may have influenced one another. Titled “Inventing Abstraction: 1910–1925,” the show illustrated over 80 artists’ radical departures from the traditions of representational art, and opened with a large diagram depicting their network to show who knew each other (an interactive version of which is online), with the most connected, like Pablo Picasso and Wassily Kandinsky, toward the center.
While working on the show with her colleagues, exhibition curator Leah Dickerman (now MoMA’s director of editorial and content strategy) was influenced in part by a course she had taken with Columbia Business School professor and Chazen Senior Scholar Paul Ingram, which was about how curators can use their professional networks to achieve success. Ingram helped to develop an early iteration of the network of early pioneers of abstraction, and later, he used the same data to embark on a new investigation.

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Ingram and his colleague Mitali Banerjee, of HEC Paris, used MoMA’s findings to examine the role that creativity and social networks played for these artists, in relationship to the level of fame they achieved. In a 2018 paper, they relayed their findings—including that for successful artists, making friends may be more important than producing novel art.

The study
Andy Warhol, Photograph of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Bryan Ferry, Julian Schnabel, Jacqueline Beaurang, Paige Powell, and Others at a Party at Julian Schnabel's Apartment, 1985
Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol, Photograph of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Bryan Ferry, Julian Schnabel, Jacqueline Beaurang, Paige …
Hedges Projects
$15,000
Ingram and Banerjee started their study by quantifying the fame, creativity, and social network of the artists in “Inventing Abstraction.” To determine each artist’s renown, they turned to Google’s database of historical texts in French and English (given that the artists were primarily living in France and the U.S.), and recorded the number of mentions each artist had between 1910 and 1925. They were looking at fame in terms of how well-known the artists were beyond their own social circles, Ingram noted, “and we’re essentially saying [that] how often you show up in the written word is an indicator of that.”
To examine the artists’ social networks, they relied on MoMA’s research, which was based on sources like biographies and artists’ letters to identify relationships. Ingram and Banerjee analyzed the artists’ social circles, which also involved data on each artist’s nationality, gender, age, and location, as well as the media they were using and the schools they attended. (They didn’t look into the artists’ exhibition history or the market for their work, though Banerjee’s future research may include such factors, Ingram said.)
In order to understand the creativity of the artists’ work, they employed two methods. First, they used machine learning to analyze and rate the creativity of thousands of artworks by the relevant artists; the computer program rated how unique works are in comparison to a set of representational artworks from the 19th century. They also asked four art historians to rate artworks by each artist for their creativity, based on factors like originality and innovation. (They found that the scores artists earned from machine learning and art historians were positively correlated.)

What it found
Peer network of the artists in “Inventing Abstraction.” Courtesy of Paul Ingram and Mitali Banerjee.
Peer network of the artists in “Inventing Abstraction.” Courtesy of Paul Ingram and Mitali Banerjee.

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While past studies have suggested that there is a link between creativity and fame, Ingram and Banerjee found, in contrast, that there was no such correlation for these artists. Rather, artists with a large and diverse network of contacts were most likely to be famous, regardless of how creative their art was.
Specifically, the greatest predictor of fame for an artist was having a network of contacts from various countries. Ingram believes this indicates that the artist was cosmopolitan and had the capacity to reach different markets or develop ideas inspired by foreign cultures. The “linchpin of the network,” he added, was Kandinsky. They also found that famous artists tended to be older, likely because they were already famous as abstraction was emerging, Ingram explained.
In terms of creativity, they found that neither the computational evaluations nor the art historians’ expert opinions were strong indicators of an artist’s renown. In other words, if an artist had high creativity scores, they were not necessarily famous.
“An important implication of the paper is to show that diverse networks matter not only as a source of creativity…but could mean other benefits,” Ingram said. “That even aside from creativity…the artists benefit from the cosmopolitan identity.”

What it means
Wassily Kandinsky with a group of artists from the Blue Rider. Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images.
Wassily Kandinsky with a group of artists from the Blue Rider. Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images.
Given the modern imperative to meet new people and network across professional industries in order to open oneself up to career opportunities and advancement, Ingram and Banerjee’s findings aren’t surprising. However, they do offer important reminders—that we won’t become famous in a vacuum and should seek to diversify our social circles.
By way of illustrating the findings, the researchers pointed to the example of two artists among the group, Vanessa Bell and Suzanne Duchamp. While neither artist is a household name, they shared similar backgrounds had very famous siblings (Virginia Woolf and Marcel Duchamp, respectively), and had similar creativity scores—but Bell was more famous.
“Both artists were part of influential artists’ groups—Suzanne Duchamp was part of the Dada circle while Vanessa Bell was part of the Bloomsbury group,” the authors wrote. “Yet Duchamp’s social circle was confined to the Dada artists; in fact, even within this circle, her closest friends were her brother Marcel, her husband Jean Crotti and the artist Francis Picabia, a family friend. In contrast, Vanessa Bell’s social world encompassed the Bloomsbury group, a broad swathe of artists who were part of the London Group, collectors and patrons located outside England such as Gertrude Stein as well as theatre producers and artists associated with Sergei Diaghilev’s Les Ballet Russes.” Ultimately, Bell’s more diverse circle correlates with her greater fame.
“What we know from different kinds of research is that diversity in networks feeds creativity, which is an important thing for artists, as well,” Ingram explained. Having such a network, he added, meant that “you could kind of be positioned in a market, and may be more interesting and worthy of attention, if you are connected to a diverse set of others.” And even though the study focused on a specific, century-old context, he predicts that the findings ring true for artists today.
Casey Lesser is Artsy’s Lead Editor, Contemporary Art and Creativity.

Raku has its repercussions : Mix up an epoxy - better to use the slow type rather than the 5 minute oneAdd gold acrylicM...
17/11/2020

Raku has its repercussions :
Mix up an epoxy - better to use the slow type rather than the 5 minute one
Add gold acrylic
Mix up thoroughly
Allow to mature into its reactive constituencies
Check your two halves with a elastic band holding them tightly together
Disassemble and apply the mix to both surfaces
(I’m doing here a simple two halves - one crack)
Join and squeeze together
Don’t touch or disturb the squeezed excess which becomes the interesting winding river
Because this epoxy has a slow developing strength use the tight-ish elastic band to hold the two halves firmly together during its 48 hour hardening process - if the band goes through the golden river that’s ok but try not to disturb the glue too much
Leave it to do what it is designed to do

30/10/2020

A Raku firing has to take place with a calm and prepared mindset... so calm I mix up the heat proof gloves... I’m throwing sawdust on pots without the gloves... I misjudged the bottle as being able to fit into the individual tin so the lid could not cover it... no worries mate... the gloves found the correct hands... I did not burn my hand... and the bottle was mindfully taken out of the can, the can removed, and the bottle lay instead on its side... that helped me make another decision - to lay both beaked jugs on their sides in order to get maximum reduction smoking benefit... enjoy the goggled Raku-man do his thing...

The unknown technical genius of ancient Egypt has been extensively explored in videos by unchartedX.comHow did they cut ...
26/10/2020

The unknown technical genius of ancient Egypt has been extensively explored in videos by unchartedX.com

How did they cut granite, basalt and chalcedony so precisely? Certainly not with the proposed academic copper chisels or saws with fine sand😂

How did they bore our the centre of solid granite vases and chalcedony vases which is cut so thin to make the stone translucent?

How did they cut the inside of solid granite tombs so precisely and the outside was polished to a high sheen as were most of the granite and basalt sculptures?

The technology is way beyond our own...

Check out the pictures I took off the computer and projector of the YouTube series on Egyptian technology by unchartedX

19/10/2020

Shouldering the kiln up the steep steps into position - wonderful guys at Mullumbimby Removals!

A new addition to my workshop arrived today on the shoulders, literally, of two men - a gas kilnGiven to me by artist Jo...
19/10/2020

A new addition to my workshop arrived today on the shoulders, literally, of two men - a gas kiln
Given to me by artist John Walters who has moved on to making wire sculpted Aussie animals. Thanks John and thanks Suvira for alerting me to John’s need to move this kiln on...
I just had to dismantle it from hood and flue, all the gas fittings and then get a removalist to deliver it 80km away and up a steep driveway, up steep steps and into position.
All of this just flowed
Now the next tasks ahead - fitting the gas connections, getting the gas bottles, building a shed over it... making some pots and sculptures and then firing it...
Yup life is beginning to unravel again🔥🏺😁

A sagger firing this morning (pots wrapped in foil with oxides, feathers and dry seed pod or twigs,etc)Still not getting...
15/10/2020

A sagger firing this morning (pots wrapped in foil with oxides, feathers and dry seed pod or twigs,etc)
Still not getting the copper pinks and other reactions but then these firings have to transcend my visions and just be how they turn out... but the motivation to get the illusive colours and contrasts keep me going...
The life of a potter...

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