When an artist describes their work as “maybe a bug, maybe a leaf”, you know it’s gonna be good! These weird and wonderful sculptures are the work of New York based artist Julia Blume:
“… Organic and highly processed materials collaborate to form ambiguous collectives, which reckon with the entanglement, love, and violence of distilling the natural world into human narrative. Sculptures reference fungus, insects, and deep sea creatures, but are painted in luminously artificial shades.”
You can find more of her leafy/buggy work on Instagram at @j.u.l.i.a_b.l.u.m.e.
Lucia Leyfield, aka @wildink_artclass, posted this idea the other day, and I LOVED it. “The sun is shining! Add some shadow sketches to some empty pages in your sketchbook… fill the gaps and have fun.” You heard her! Ready, GO.
Happy Jumpday ~ Danielle
Oh I've done this with lavender on a sunny day and it's glorious! You actually have to draw fast-ish because the shadows keep moving, which gives you the added bonus of being reminded that the earth is revolving around the sun and we are all just insignificant motes of dust. Glorious. If it's not a sunny day, you can also do this: clip some branches, bring them inside, set them in a vase, set up a reading lamp (one with an angled neck) and cast a shadow on the wall. Tape your paper to the wall (use removable tape!) and trace away. You can get really interesting results by angling the lamp to create exaggerated shadows.