Tag Archives: Nils Udo

“Line” Design Process: Step 2 (Stick Studies)

I will refer to these art studies as my mixed medium “stick” studies. After spending some time on these small structures, I brainstormed with Joe and came up with a new idea to help inspire my final project. I am very intrigued by the work of Giuseppe Penone and his tree carvings. Discussing relief sculpture in class and observing Giuseppe’s carving techniques, I would love to create some kind of subtraction sculpture. For my next post, I will show my design process in using layers of cardboard to create some kind of relief carving.

Giuesppe Penone Carving

Though the following studies don’t quite relate to this idea, I still learned a lot from working with line and forming segments to create these pieces. Other than the wire, all the materials used were straight which was a good and bad thing for me. The good thing was it insured my clear use of line and allowed me to challenge myself to create unique designs with nothing but straight lines. It was also hard because I felt I couldn’t explore different techniques of making sculptures, such as carving and molding.

I was really inspired by Mark Di Suvero, Tara Donovan, and Nils Udo.

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Activating Space

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Nils Udo (Research)

320px-Nils-Udo_(1993)

Nils Udo is a Bavarian artist that has been working with nature as his main inspiration since 1972. Though he originally began by painting nature, Nils Udo eventually turned to creating site-specific pieces using natural materials. His artworks have appeared all over the world, including Europe, Japan, Israel, India and Mexico.

“By elevating the natural space to a work of art, I had opened myself to reality, to the liveliness of nature – I had overcome the gap between art and life. The roundabout way of two-dimensional abstraction in painting had been overcome. Henceforth my pictures were no longer painted, but planted, watered, mowed, or fenced.”

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Bindweed flowers held in their journey on a stream by a stick dam. Reunion, Indian Ocean, 1990

He works on site using found berries, leaves, sticks, the movement of water, and the growth of plants. Each piece is in response to the landscape and materials he finds around him. Nil Udo uses many different ways to create line, whether it be the materials he uses, the placement, or implied lines.

lavaflames348Lava flames–flowers & lava flow, Reunion, IndiaClemsonNest1Nest in red clay, Clemson College, 2005

desert7Dune Edge: pampas grass, sand, wind –Namibia, 2001stonestimeman7STONE-TIME-MAN:  quartzite monolith weighing about 150 tons, fir trunks blown over in storm, Forest Sculpture trail, Wittgenstein-Sauerland, Bad Berleberg, Germany, 2001mirorleaves7Robinia Leaf Swing: robinia leaf halved, ash twigs, Valle de Sella, Italy,1992willownest7

Willow Nest: pollarded willow, hay, fern stalks, poppy petals, Marchiennes Forest, France, 1994

Nils Udo talks about the rhythm of nature in his art, which correlates with his use of line, circles, and patterns.

nestThe Nest: earth, stones, silver birch, grass; Lineberg Heath,Germany, 1978

“I associated my existence with the cycles of nature, with the circulation of life. Henceforth my life and work proceeded under the guidance and in keeping with the rhythms of nature. Sensations are omnipresent. I just need to pick them up and release them from their anonymity. Utopias are under every rock, on every leaf, behind every tree, in the clouds and in the wind. The sun’s course on the days of equinox; the tiny habitat of a beetle on a lime leaf; the pointed maple’s red fire; the scent of herbs in a wooded gorge; a frog’s croak in the duckweed; the primrose’s perfume on the banks of a mountain creek; animal traces in the snow; the remaining trajectory of a bird darting through the woods; a gust of wind in a tree; the dancing of light on leaves; the endlessly complex relationship of branch to branch, twig to twig, leaf to leaf.”

waterhouse7Waterhouse: spruce trunks, birch branches, willow switches and sod on tidal flats– Waddensee mudflats, Holland, 1982

I find Nils Udo’s work to be very inspirational. His techniques and statements about his own work show there are a lot more to site-specific art and installations than just the final piece. It takes a lot of pre-planning and patience to reach his final goals. While his use of line and volume is apparent, Udo’s work is influential to more than just my next project (based on lines.) His reflections and explanations about his work show how every part of the work was planned out and given meaning. He also has a varied use of media and was able to transition from painting to earth sculptures on a much larger scale. His transformation is something he is very aware of, and has documented not only the change within his art, but within his mind as he views the world.

http://www.morning-earth.org/ARTISTNATURALISTS/AN_Nils_Udo.html