Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Howard Zane, Working on the Railroad: A World of Model Trains



"The only rule is that there are no rules. The hobby is about limitless imagination. Every skill you would need probably to navigate life can be found in this hobby. Well, there's electronics, carpentry, tools, history.. It goes on and on and on."

For more than 30 years, Howard Zane has been working on the railroad in the basement of his home in Columbia, Maryland.

"Total of what you see here is about almost 3,000 square feet of trains. There's about 15,000 hours in the land. See, I'm a stickler. Everything has to be designed and built by me."

Everything that is in detailed miniature, from the billboards above the tunnels to the soda machines to the water towers. The retired industrial designer has expanded his basement twice to accommodate his model train set's ever-growing sprawl.

"Down here on the layout there's about 150 locomotives. Figures, there's over 6,000 figures on the way up. Automobiles, about 600 automobiles. The track is 23 scale miles. And the scale is actually 3.5 millimeters to the foot, or 1/87 actual size."

Zane got his first train set from his father when he was 3 years old. The hobby is chugged into every part of his life, including places where it wasn't exactly welcome.

"I got married the first time in 1962. Driving down to Fort Walton Beach, stop at a convenience store on the outskirts of town, and there I bought this magazine called Railroad Model Craftsman. Spent the whole honeymoon, locked myself in the restroom and just read this thing cover to cover. My wife wasn't too happy haha.."

The marriage didn't last, but Zane discovered a lifelong passion.

"Seeing it run is very enjoyable. It's moving art, which I like, but I love building it and creating it. This is my life. I love it."

But sadly for Zane, few of the young people he meets seem to share his enthusiasm. Model railroading isn't exactly catching on with kids these days.

"I got seven grandkids that think their grandpop's a nut. The grandkids are into their iPods or whatever pods or whatever you call those things. They come and visit and they're like this (bussy wiht their "smart" devices), all night long."

Then again, says Zane, who spends about 40 hours a week fussing over things like miniature maple trees and tiny electric lights, most people just don't get it.

"I have several visitors. Whe have open houses and some of the comments I could write a whole book on. Some of the people ask me if I set up every Christmas or when do I take it down. Everybody equates model railroading with the proverbial loop around the Christmas tree, and it's not that at all. It's a year-round hobby."

A hobby, Zane says that never grows old.

"The thrill of accomplishment is overwhelming. I can't explain how wonderful it is. See, I'm totally stuck in the mid-20th century. I can't get out of it. I try to apply for admission to the 21st century, but they won't let me in. And that's fine, this is my time capsule.

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Amazing Star Wars Miniature Landscape by Adrian Weinberg

Inspired by the planet Dagobah. In the Star wars films, this is where Luke Skywalker crashes his spaceship and meets Yoda for the first time.

The 'Dagobah' terrarium is approximately 1 metre wide and high, and uses plants from Victoria as its base. The bottom layer comprises larger chunks of charcoal, which provides the drainage system of the terrarium and – due to its carbon content –also filters and absorbs bad smells. For the final layers, Weinberg uses Sphagnum moss and Peat moss.

The two walls on either side of the terrarium are made from gold vine and are one of the most identifiable aspects of this installation. To top it off, Weinberg adds mist and, of course, a crashed spaceship front and centre – complete with smoke coming out of it! – while Yoda looks on from his perch in the trees.

Creating for Weinberg is all about experimentation. "Trying and trying and trying again seems to be a recurring theme," he explains. "But eventually it gets all 'Jedi' and you throw things together while emptying your mind, and always surprise yourself with the result.”

Weinberg explains the design process as a 'mad science', which develops naturally as he experiments with different plants and rocks. One piece of advice he gives for anyone wanting to design more difficult terrariums is to always buy more of the plants, rocks and other design tools than you need – for the purpose of trial and error.



Art of Kendal Murray

Artist Kendal Murray builds miniature mixed-media sculptures that take viewers on a playful and imaginative journey. Using tiny toy figures and objects, Murray builds small worlds filled with creative memories, daydreams, and fantasies. The artist says, "The idea of creating these miniature works came from dream states and how we are able to play with our own identity, to play with different roles we take on in our dream state. So the miniature works serve as a metaphor for intuitive thoughts."

To construct the sculptures, Murray dips the figures into glue and then uses tweezers to delicately and precisely place them into the scenes—all of the which are set on unexpected objects like inside of a glass tea pot, on top of a small purse, or on one side of a compact mirror. By using such a specific base for each arrangement, Murray defines the boundaries of her story and invites viewers to peer in closely to get a better look. Each work is just a snapshot, but exactly what the story is about is left up to the viewer to decide. While inspecting the work, viewers will quickly find themselves inventing imaginative narratives about the characters and events.