From:
abknight@zzzzzz
Date:
Thu, 27 Jan 2005 21:24:52 -0600 (CST)
Subject:
Ian Newbery
Quoted text begins.theory are very
instructive, but the links to work, artists, and related
stuff makes the
list worth its weight in gold. Keep 'em coming. I'll
keep lurking.
End of quote.
Chaz I so do agree. Whole new worlds are opening to me.
Whole new ways of interacting with stone. With granite
which I have been getting to know. It is magic. With
every pitch.
Sorry to the marble and alabaster enthusiasts. I can
certainly poke into marble links harder. It would seem
that granite is dominant in the gallery and in the
symposium. This is a world of which I had no idea and it
surprises me to no end that seeming all of us are largely
in the dark about ongoing stone activties throughout the
lands and that stone art is so alive and vibrant. I had
given up my subscription to Sculpture Magazine because the
stone features were so occasional. Maybe I should renew
it. Perhaps if I had kept it I would not now be so
ignorant. Are there other periodicals out there for the
stone "artist"? I'd say someone like Tomas Lipps with his
Stonenexus magazine has a real need to meet. Aren't there
such magazines? Stone Age or some such? Stone World,
which sounds like countertops?
Bill
- Follow-ups
- message 00247: sculpture zines and diamond bits - gary grossman (28 Jan 2005)
- References
- message 00234: Ian Newbery - Rstrainsr (27 Jan 2005)
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