Monday, February 20, 2012

The Spirit Of Gaudi Lives On: Contemporary Broken Tile Mosaics

Hi all,

A recent post, which covered the work of Antoni Gaudi and his contemporaries in Barcelona Spain in the turn of the last century, struck a chord with many readers of this blog.  Architectural ceramics, primarily mosaics was turned on its head thanks to this new and vibrant technique of surface decoration. The revolutionary art and architecture of that time and place, particularly the broken tile style of mosaics resonates today.  

I had long been a tile designer and maker when I visited New York City and happened on Grant's Tomb in Riverside Park in Manhattan one morning.  I was looking for a place to do my T'ai Chi and was stunned to see that the memorial was surrounded on three sides by an undulating poured concrete bench covered with dozens of scenes in broken tile mosaic.  I was familiar with the technique but had never seen such a large installation. The installation seemed to depict the history of New York City in a somewhat zany fashion.  It totaled at least several hundred yards.  Years later I found this article about the restoration of the project in the New York Times.  This major work of public art was largely the creation of Chilean artist Pedro Silva and was assembled in 1972 by a team of hundreds of volunteers.  In 2008 it was restored by the artist, his son and others.
Grant's Tomb, New York City



























Riverside Drive and Sakura Park in the Background






















Intrigued by the Gaudi inspired installation around Grant's Tomb in Riverside Park in New York City I began experimenting with the broken tile mosaic technique.  Shorty after that, I started receiving commissions for outdoor projects that were perfect for broken tile mosaics.  The first, titled "The Five Chinese Elements", was installed in the garden in front of an elementary school.  Each of five benches represented one of the the five traditional elements: Earth, Metal, Water, Wood and Fire.

Earth
















Metal
























Water






















Wood























Fire





















Completed Benches in Use














The next post of Architectural Ceramics: Tile+Mosaic will look at more contemporary broken tile mosaics installations.  To receive notification of new posts to this blog click here and type subscribe in the subject line.  All email addresses remain confidential and are not shared with any person or site.
  

George Woideck 

George Woideck is a ceramic artist specializing in tile and mosaic.  View his work at artisanarchitecturalceramics.com.  See his recent projects on the Behance Network.  Call George at 216 225 0368.  Email him at gwoideck@tileandclayart.com.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Pattern and Design in Islamic Art and Architecture

Hi all,

I had a query recently about the source of an image of a tessellated  mosaic panel from the Alhambra that appeared in a recent post of this blog.  (Mosaics: The Beginning of Architectural Ceramics, Part Three). The query came from an architect and teacher from Buenos Aires and I had to pause to think where this image originally came from.
Tessellated Mosaic Panel in Moroccan Style






















I pasted the URL of the photo into Google Image Search and while checking the results I discovered an extraordinary web resource of images of patterns in Islamic Art.  The website is aptly titled Pattern in Islamic Art.  It contains over four thousand images and includes many of the tessellated mosaic panels that are so dear to artists, architects and art teaches.  Looking at these images I recalled a recent visit to the the Metropolitan Museum of Art's New Galleries for the Art of the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, and Later South Asia.  A long title for some very beautiful galleries that opened, after extensive renovation, on November 1, 2011.  The renovations included work by Moroccan Craftsmen.  I had an opportunity to visit these galleries shortly after they opened and here is a small sample of photos that I took of the gorgeous art on
display there.
In the Moroccan Tessellated Mosaic Style

Earthenware Plate Influenced by Chinese Porcelain
































Patterns R Us, so to speak.  The tessellated mosaic patterns come from North Africa.  The beautiful ceramic tiles and pottery were often made in the Turkish city of Iznik (the Byzantine city of Nicea, of the Nicene Creed fame).

I hope you take the time to explore the images on Pattern in Islamic Art and if the opportunity presents itself, visit the new Islamic Galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

George Woideck


 


George Woideck is a ceramic artist specializing in tile and mosaic.  View his tile and mosaic installations at Artisan Architectural Ceramics.   See his recent projects on the Behance Network.  Call George at 216 225 0368.  Email him at gwoideck@tileandclayart.com.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Antoni Gaudi, Barcelona and the Modern Mosaic

Gaudi shakes up the world of architecture and mosaic

Spain not only brought us the mosaics of the Alhambra in the South of the country; it also gave us the the modern mosaics of Barcelona in the North.  They were created for buildings and parks  by Catalan architects Lluis Domenech I Montaner, Antoni Gaudi and Josep Maria Jujol in the late 19th and the early 20th centuries.  The most famous of these three is certainly Gaudi whose magnum opus, the church of La Sagrada Família is yet to be completed after more than one hundred years of construction.  The most significant quality of these architects' work is the seamless integration of architecture, sculpture, stained glass, ironwork and of course mosaics.  This created a joyous artistic style known in Catalan as Modernisme.  Their radical approach to mosaics was to mix traditional, square cut tesserae with irregularly shaped pieces selected from broken ceramic tile--a technique appropriately called broken tile mosaics.  These mosaics have a great deal more surface interest than traditional mosaics do.
Let's take a look at one of the early examples of this this style of architecture and mosaic creation, the Palau de la Musica Catalana by Montaner.  It's a concert hall designed for the Catalan Choral Society and it certainly would be a visual as well as an aural treat to attend a concert there.
Interior of the Palau with muses behind stage


Mosaic on the exterior facade-left side

Mosaic on the exterior facade-right side




Vent surround


Columns
The muses-upper sections
The muses-lower sections























































































































The epitome of the Modernisme style in architecture is Gaudi's basilica La Sagrada Familia (Holy Family).  It has a surreal quality that is best described in photos rather than words.



















 

It's been in construction for a century now and on first viewing seems to be more of a fanciful sculpture that a house of worship.  The mosaic detail on the spires define the power as well as whimsy that broken tile mosaics can impart to architecture.

                                                                                      





















Another of Gaudi's great works is the Park Guell, a horizontal creation as opposed to the verticality  of the the cathedral.
The Park Guell's famous lizard
















Benches in the Park Guell






















The Barcelona style of broken tile mosaic, usually identified with Antoni Gaudi remains popular to this day.  In our next post we'll profile some contemporary examples of this popular technique.
Receive email updates to his blog by clicking updates and typing subscribe in the message line.  All email addresses remain confidential and are not shared with any person or site.

George Woideck 

George Woideck is a ceramic artist specializing in tile and mosaic.  View his work at artisanarchitecturalceramics.com.  See his recent projects on the Behance Network.  Call George at 216 225 0368.  Email him at gwoideck@tileandclayart.com.


 

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Mosaics: The Alhambra, Geometry and M.C. Escher

It sounds a bit like a joke at an art convention: What do the Alhambra, Geometry and M.C. Escher have in common?  Plenty it turns out.  There's a direct line between the three beginning with the fact that Islamic mosaic makers, in the Middle Ages were using a complex form of Geometry in their installations.  And it was a form of Geometry that Western Mathematics didn't understand until centuries later.  This is all documented in the article "Tiles of Infinity" by Sebastian J. Prange in the September/October issue of Saudi Aramco World.













The mathematics of the tessellations used in these mosaics is clearly described in the article but the photos make the point just as clearly for visually oriented folks.  (Saudi Aramco World is a beautiful and informative magazine about Islamic history, art and culture that is published six times a year.  You can read it on the web or subscribe by mail for free: A real bargain). 

The Mosaics described in Pranges's article are from central Asia but the Alhambra Palace in Andalusian Spain contains many similar mosaics. 
  














Southern Spain is rich in this type of mosaic as well as Moorish influenced architecture.  That region of Spain during the middle ages, with its culture of tolerance between Chrsitians, Jews and Muslims, is documented in the fascinating book "The Ornament of the World" by Maria Rosa Menocal.  Thanks to Pieter Schaafsma from the American Society of Landscape Architects group on Linkedin for bringing this book to our attention.

So we've touched on the Alhambra and Geometry, but where does M.C. Escher come in?  Of course he's famous for several kinds of graphic art.  The first is his fanciful, architectural influenced prints that create a surreal world of arches, columns, staircases and towers that trick the visual senses.




















The second type of work focuses on tessellations.  And this is the work that was influenced by a visit that Escher and his wife made to the Alhambra in October 1922.  But instead of the geometric shapes he found there, his revolutionary contribution to art was to use recognizable, often humorous shapes in his tessellations.




































This style was parodied in a cover commentary in the New Yorker Magazine on the recent, tragic Gulf oil spill.























In some of his most wonderful later work, Escher combined the surreal with tessellations.




















 There's an excellent opportunity is see more of this work in a current exhibition at the Akron Art Museum titled "M.C. Escher: Impossible Realities".  It runs through May 29, 2011 and contains the complete range Escher's graphic work.  Looking at the prints in the exhibit, one is struck by his use of contrast and the depth of black that he attains.  It's really quite thrilling see the real work instead of reproductions, web images and posters.  The exhibit also contains several of the woodblocks that the prints were pulled from.  And for more on the pivotal part Geometry plays in his work, look closely at the tessellations contained in his sketchbooks: Under the pen and ink and watercolor you can see the lightly penciled grids of hexagons, diamonds or triangles that underlie each design.


George Woideck

George Woideck is a ceramic artist specializing in tile and mosaic.  View his work at artisanarchitecturalceramics.com.  Call George at 216 225 0368.  Email him at gwoideck@tileandclayart.com.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Mosaics: The Beginning of Architectural Ceramics, Part Three

An Introduction to Architectural Ceramics: Mosaics in the Islamic World


















The Islamic world, primarily of Asia and North Africa, took a radically different approach to mosaics than Europe did.  Instead of using tesserae (the small, usually square tiles made from clay, stone of glass) to create a larger recognizable picture, Islamic artists used them to create complex patterns instead.  Usually these mosaics formed tessellations, repeating geometric designs of polygons that have no overlaps of gaps.  Contemporary mathematicians have marveled  at the complex geometric patterns used in these mosaics.  Usually, but not always, images of living creatures were not used for religious reasons.  In Europe the place to see this type of tessellated mosaic is the Alhambra in the city of Granada in Andalusia in Southern Spain.  During the middle ages Andalusia was ruled by Moorish Emirs.  The mosaics in the Alhambra were heavily influenced by works being produced just across the Straits of Gibraltar in Morocco.  Similar work was produced in the rest of North Africa and throughout Turkey and the Middle East.
Detail





























If we travel across the Islamic world from West to East we arrive in the City of Samarkand in the Bukharan region of Uzbekistan in Central Asia.  Although this area is thousands of miles from Morocco and the Andalusian region of Spain a similar geometric approach is often used.






























Many of the patterns and designs used in these mosaics remind us of the Oriental rugs and the  felted wall hangings produced in the the same region.
  
In the next post of Architectural Ceramics: Tile+Mosaic we travel to Barcelona Spain and the broken tile mosaics of architects Josep Maria Jujol and Antoni Gaudi.


George Woideck


George Woideck is a ceramic artist specializing in tile and mosaic.  To view his work visit artisanarchitecturalceramics.com.  Contact George at 216 225 0368.