Wednesday 4 November 2020

Multiple colour LEDs for glass "ice" sculptures!



 
With the recent and rapid development of LED lighting technology, I now have an alternate lighting option to the solar panel and LED lighting (see my blog post of March 8, 2020) for my carved glass "ice" sculptures.

This new option offers a choice of mutiple colour LED (changing colour quickly or slowly) or to hold steady on white, red, blue or green illumination. The videos would not load here, so to see them go to my instagram : @chuckstj

This style is battery powered (with rechargeable batteries) or with a cord plugged into a USB charging device.


For a comparison of ambient light (from a nearby table lamp) to the multiple colour LEDs and to the solar panel with white LED, this photo (below) shows the variable effects (from left to right) on the relief carved glass images.


Working through a variety of ideas and many woodworking techniques, I finally worked out a suitable method for assembling the light boxes in wood bases.


These pieces are priced from $200 to $500 (CDN), vary in size from 15cm (6") to 30cm (12") tall and can be safely shipped with the double box technique I use for all my glass shipments.



Contact me for purchases or images of more pieces: email: nimbusglass@cablelan.net
Instagram: @chuckstj







Saturday 22 August 2020

"The Victaulic"



One of my pieces on the theme of 'balancing', which can variously be related as a 'flow' of motion (going in and out of balance), a (relatively) stable position of "equal balance", or an alternatively (and relative) stable position of being "off balance".

The Victaulic is a monitoring device for the collective zeitgeist (events happening in our (relative) space/time continuum), "measuring" or "weighing" the stability of events and indicating their likeliness to continue in the same vein as the current events or to monitor the changes that will or have occurred.


Apparently, this situation of imbalance has been going on at least since the last of the winter's snow.


Previous to that time, in early and mid-winter, indications were that things were much more in the "equal balance" mode. Even with the long, snowy winter, relative stability and repose can be seen to be the case.



Monitoring the twilight of our "post-post-industrial" age, The Victaulic is part of a series of sculptures using detritus from our culture. The aim is to create 'quasi-scientific' pieces with a feeling of mysteriousness, often with an unknown origin or purpose.

I think of these objects as "future-post-apocalyptic-pieces-for-the-present". Although that 'future' looks uncomfortably like the present.


Be safe. Keep monitoring. 


Sunday 8 March 2020

Glass "Ice" sculptures with LED lights and solar panels



I have been making variations of these chipped edge pieces with etched and carved images that I call glass "ice" sculptures for many years. Recently, I worked out the idea I have had for several years of illuminating the glass from below with a small LED light.

  

In conjunction with a small solar panel, the battery is recharged d
uring the day and a light sensor in the solar panel turns the light on at night and off in the morning. With a polished surface on the base of the glass, the LED is able to project light well up into the 19mm (3/4") thick glass, highlighting the texture of the relief carved images.



Experimenting with various tools and techniques over the years, I can create very fine detail with mostly industrial grade equipment (wet sanding belts, sandblast abrasives, industrial diamond grinding bits, etc.).


Many of these techniques are easily scaled up for work on doors, windows and other larger pieces. See my other blog posts or my website (www.artmotive.com) for architectural glass pieces.



Although these pieces can be enjoyed with ambient light (as in this photo above with natural daylight), or with light from a nearby table lamp (below):


With the light from the LED below the glass, the images really stand out at night, particularly against the dark of a window as a background.


For a better effect with wider designs, I am using two solar panels and light assemblies in the base:



I will be selling these pieces by direct mail order (they are 15cm to 30cm (6" to 12") tall) and can packed for safe shipment. Contact me by email: nimbusglass@airspeedwireless.ca for new designs, details and pricing, or by phone: (250) 320-3392 to make an appointment to visit me at my Shuswap Lake studio (south central B.C., Canada). 

New pieces can be seen on Instagram @chuckstj


Tuesday 7 January 2020

"Fourth Dimensional Time Piece #1"

 

"Our" star certainly lined up for this unexpected surprise on Dec. 22, 2019.

Sitting inside, I noticed the low angled sunlight peeking through the clouds in the late afternoon and skimming across the deck through the the glass door. Remembering the "Fourth Dimensional Time Piece #1" in its glass box just outside the door, I stepped out on the deck and saw that by turning the whole plinth with the "time piece", I was just in time to orient the lens to focus the rays of the sun onto the pyramidal form - once again in the serendipitous fashion I have experienced many times in past years.


Originally, the components of this piece were playing with the idea of 'scaling', in which the actual shapes you are seeing can be interpreted (understood/misunderstood) to be an image of something either very large or very small. Without a 'context' to place them in, the mind,
being a pattern seeking  organ, will try to interpret the images or textures as something comprehensible.  

Plato identified five geometric solids in his view of the universe: the cube, the tetrahedron, the octahedron, the dodecahedron and the icosahedron. I referenced these shapes in the corners of the stone base with the tetrahedron and cube, with the sphere representing the other three (roughly 'spherical') shapes.   


By moving the hand held lens over various parts of the piece, micro or macroscopic vistas can be imagined. The "interstellar space" of the trapped air bubbles in the layers of fused glass, or the "landscapey" texture of the polished stone. Viewing the chaotic surface of the cast brass pyramidal form with its liquid or 'flame melted' effect reminds me of the visual texture of clouds.



I had mounted the lens to the pyramidal form at the distance of the focal length of that lens, anticipating that a light could be arranged to create something like this effect. I am surprised how often the effect has been achieved in a variety of placements.

Although this was an effect I could imagine, the random kinetic effects of light through glass (focussed, refracted or transmitted) is a continual fascination for me. As familiar and yet ever changing as watching light on water, shapes in clouds or the flames of a fire.