Showing posts with label metal sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metal sculpture. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

January & February slipped by in the blink of an artist eye.




The weather is wait a minute change, as I look out my office window to a fierce total white out and think what a perfect day for daydreams and strong black coffee. 

Click here to see the entire updated post with pictures.





Please note I would like to express my great appreciation and thanks to all that have worked, helped, hindered, enlightened my path recently.   Life is magic thanks for being there.

 Originally posted at - http://mvarametalandpaint.com/site/blog/

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Charles F. Lucas Confectionery & Wine bar hosting 'Anti-Super Bowl Art Party'


Friday, February 1, 2013
TROY — If you are upset none of the New York football teams are in Super Bowl 47, or you don’t care for either of the teams, or you simply couldn’t care less about football at all, then the Charles F. Lucas Confectionery & Wine Bar on Second Street has an alternative.

The “Anti-Super Bowl Party” will be held at the wine bar where people can enjoy not only wine, cheese and beer but also a half-time art show.

According to a press release, the party will feature metal sculptures made out of found materials and created by metal sculptor Michelle M. Vara, of the Ballard Road Art Studio Gallery in Wilton.

On display will be Laissez-fair #344, aptly-nicknamed “Couch Potato,” as it is a piece made out of parts from a tiny television.

Co-owners Vic Christopher and his wife Heather La Vine had both worked in the sports industry — they were with the Tri-City Valley Cats until they were fired because of their relationship — but he said he now realizes sports aren’t all that important.

“I worked in professional sports for a decade. It took me that long to realize that a game has no direct impact on my life,” Christopher said in the release. “Wine and Cheese get me more excited than watching some guy throw a ball around the grass.”

But the real purpose of the party, at least for La Vine, is to get away from the television screen and interact with human beings.

It also helps the bar doesn’t have a television in sight.

“We spend too much time looking at a screen and not enough time looking at each other,” La Vine said in the release. “At the Confectionery we encourage conversation between friends old and new.”

The event will run from noon till 9 p.m. on Sunday.

Andrew Beam may also be reached at 270-1294.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Sneak Peek - Elms College Borgia Gallery to Feature miChelle M. Vara’s “inVoices” Art Exhibit


New Works and Jewelry
The exhibit is open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. daily from October 28 through November 16.


(Chicopee, Massachusetts)—The Borgia Gallery at Elms College will feature the work of miChelle m. Vara, titled inVoices, from October 28 through November 16, 2012. The artist’s reception will be held 12-2 p.m., November 16 in the gallery, located on the second floor of Mary Dooley College Center on the Elms College campus.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Art- MoHu- Troy- Opening- Artist Talk- October 9th


Greetings, All
I hope this finds you all well!
Please join me
 October 9th
3:30pm-
Artist talk is at the Dinosaur Barbeque with lunch, Troy NY  -Pre Registration Required Fee-Currently Full. 
6pm- 
We will be having a short Opening for my solo art display at the Schacht Fine Arts Center of Sage College on one Division Street Troy NY,
 Prompt 7:30pm- 
Curtain for the showing of War of the Worlds with a small fee of $10.00pp to support the Theater Company. 

The Art display is open daily and has extended hours on curtain nights of the theater.




The month is full of exciting new works and gatherings for fun and exchange, I look forward to seeing  you soon.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

From Raw to Refined Sculpture Show


Opening Reception November 2nd- 5 to 9 pm at the Albany Center Gallery. Show will run October 16th to November 17th, 2012.From Raw to Refined, Albany Center Gallery’s next show, will be up on October 16.  It is the first all sculpture show, featuring the work of a diverse group of artists–Harold Gubnitsky, Paul Kant, Jason Schultz, and miChelle Vara.
For the rest of the article please go to http://mvarametalandpaint.com/site/2012/10/
Metal Sculpture called- Unconditional Love made of metal re-cycled bed frame and miscellaneous parts. 

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Monday, August 6, 2012

Thanks for the Fun!


Thank you all new and old acquaintances for a wonderful opening reception.

The music, food, work was perfect!  The energy was ecstatic and fun.

So many thanks for your participation and in-put!

~ I appreciate it!

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Opening Reception August 5th in Ballston Spa


You are cordially invited to:



The National Bottle Museum Artist Space presents:

                 “Fli-N-Shu”

          2 and 3 dimensional solo works of miChelle M. Vara

          Opening Reception- August 5th, 5 to 7pm



Vara used the opportunity at the National Bottle Museum’s Jan Rutland Artist Space, to display new abstract work. The dimensional pieces include glass, metal, stone and horses in Saratoga Springs race season fashion.

          Show until September 17th 2012, Friday-Tuesday 10am -4pm

Located- The National Bottle Museum Ph:(518) 885-7589

76 Milton Ave. Ballston Spa NY- the Jan Rutland Memorial Artist Space


Sunday, July 15, 2012

Horses Horses and more Saratoga Horses!

 
miChelle has created a large new inventory of sculpted horses for the opening of race season in Saratoga NY. The newly Published article reads (previously posted) about how meeting the artist is free family fun while vacationing in Saratoga. The artist has been welcoming visitors for more than 20 years, from around the country at the Ballard Road Art Studio Gallery, located Exit 16 off the Northway one mile East on the corner of Rt50 (you can’t miss it). The studio gallery has a large display of outdoor sculpture in various styles that are available for purchase. The artist works by commission and personal vision. Vara has 4 shows solo shows coming up so please visit again or go to http://www.michellevara.com/for the updated information and pictures.




If you are seeing this through some one else's site (hacked) please visit Vara's ACTUAL SITE:
-Thank you!

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Spring into art !

I am glad to say this spring has shaped up to be like no other. The collector parties (sales) and private invites to travel, show, teach and speak have been wonderfully exhilarating.


I wanted to extend my grate appreciation & thank everyone for sharing and making all the fun.



Life is supposed to be fun!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

What do Steve Jobs, Tom Cruise, Lewis Carroll, Steven Spielberg and Leonardo daVinci have in common?

I met Serena Kovalosky years ago at the winter carnival in Whitehall NY. Where I drove my team of North American Spotted Draft Horses as the hay ride entertainment. We had lovely conversation  and come to find we use the same photographer Jim McLaughlin. Years later she now published and article interviewing me on dyslexia art and life.



So here goes-
__________________________________________________________
#103 – While not all Artists are dyslexic, the Artist Mind is the portal through which dyslexics experience their world.
A vivid imagination. An appreciation for color, tone, texture and form. Exceptionally visual and highly innovative. These are some of the characteristics of an Artist. They also represent the positive side of dyslexia.
I met miChelle M. Vara many years ago and, being a fellow artist, our conversation quickly turned to the subjects of art and the creative process. Vara works in a variety of mediums, from sculptural work in metal to paintings and murals, to airbrush commissions, faux-finishes and installations. She is a whirlwind of creative energy.
Our paths crossed again recently as a result of this blog, and as I researched her work and background, I discovered she is severely dyslexic.
Vara has what’s known as “crossed optic lobe”, where incoming information goes to the opposite side of the brain, and is therefore received upside-down and backwards. “I think in pictures,” says Vara. “I remember people, events and ideas as if they were photographed. I also remember feelings, emotions, textures, lighting,…..but no words. I connect very differently from everyone else.”
At a young age, miChelle Vara’s father placed her in a Montessori school system. “I was considered an extreme case,” says Vara. “It took a very long time for me to develop verbal and reading skills. Had I been left to a parent who was not understanding and caring, I would have been labelled as retarded. I would not have blossomed in a public school system, even though my IQ is actually well above average, because I am unable to take regular tests.”

"Neon Flames" by miChelle Vara
How has art figured into her life? “I’ve been an artist from Day One,”answers Vara. “Thankfully. I grew up in an environment that embraced my differences, feeding my imagination. But don’t let me kid you, my path has not always been easy. I still received enormous pressure from the outside world – people would call me stupid, make fun of me. I got picked on terribly by adults as well as children.”
“Art is my refuge,” she continues, “and any uncomfortable situation would send me into creation mode. My best friends were a thoroughbred horse named Socks and a dog named Cherice. I am thankful I have always had the ease of art and the love of animal friends and I think all handicapped children should have a pet and a safe place to escape.”
I ask Vara if art helped her with her understanding of how her mind works.
“No,” Vara replies. “My mind works because of my art.”
“Art is where I feel safe and at home. I am driven on a soul level to create, which is why I feel a compulsion to be in that creative state continually, making visual statements and conversations. My art is my life – it’s all very metaphorical.”
“I draw daily,” she continues. “My life is one artistic picture after another – it is nothing more than visual accounts of time. I create sculptural work because I often feel compelled to create an idea/statement of dimension that is not only ascetically pleasing but structurally sound. I often don’t have time to get all my ideas and thoughts into a physical object, so I may come back to it years later.”

Over the past 30+ years, miChelle Vara’s artwork has won numerous awards, and she regularly receives commissions from museums, corporations, individuals and municipal clients. The artist recently created a large-scale sculpture especially for the Adirondack Museum in Blue Mountain Lake, NY, using the museum’s logo as her inspiration for the fascinating work entitled, “The Guide”.
Vara wants to make one thing perfectly clear. “Please understand that I do not see dyslexia as a handicap to who I am and what my work is,” she says. “It is my greatest birth gift. “

Life is what you make it. miChelle Vara knows how to make the best of her life, and she has the artwork to prove it.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

5th Annual- D.V. Awareness moth

Please Join us in-



 1- PurpleNight Lights™- residents are encouraged to purchase a purple light bulb and display it on their porch or in their window throughout Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Organizer Sandra Becker from the H.E.R. Shelter says the porch and window light bulbs are available in two sizes and for just a few dollars. The goal is to bring awareness and support to victims and survivors of domestic violence and to send a strong message that “Domestic Violence Has No Place in Our Community.”



2- the Shirts of Awareness
Hang a shirt at the 6 Ballard Road Art Studio Wilton, NY
In remembrance of someone or just to support awareness.
Anyone is welcome to bring a tee shirt to hang and write on.


3-B.J.S. ARTWORKS Show,
10-8 to 10-31-2011, - Opening reception is Saturday October 8, 4 – 6 pm
    Meet the artists and enjoy the acoustic inspirational music by Pam Barker.

miChelle Vara .com is showing metal sculpture-
This body of work is called- “The Soul Perceptible”
“My life nothing more than an investigation left in metal and paint”
The artist mission is to make the soul capable of being realized by the mind or through the senses. Visionary art encourages the development of our inner sight. To find the visionary realm we use our inner intuitive eyes. All inspiration originates here. The visionary embraces the spectrum of imagined space.
I believe best known for this is artist Alex Gray.
Poet William Blake called it “The Divine Imagination.”



In Loving Memory of my friend Dawn Bove Roberts, who lost her life in 2007.
Awareness is the only opportunity to stop this silent epidemic in all communities.
This epidemic is not gender specific so all are welcome to participate.


Sincerely , miChelle M. Vara

Thursday, September 8, 2011

9-11 sculpture outline, or the artist's visual symbolization.

“As an artist it is invigorating to have been given such an eminent opportunity”…….

The sculpture piece I call “Respectful Remembrances” (50” X 57” h) is meant to reflect the unity of Americans’ in all walks of life, offering an uplifting sense of healing and forward progression, on the home front horizon, without forgetting the past.

 I have outlined in words, a highlight of my visual symbolization.

·       The I Beam
Is an actual piece from the World Trade Center events.
 You can see the sever duress the iron has been through by the bends that are in it.
It encapsulates immense spirit and energy.

 ·       The arched rusted piece of Angel Iron –

On 9/11 the scene of countless people walking orderly across the Brooklyn Bridge towards safety, left a mark in my mind’s eye.
 The events as they happened in real time. 
The rise and fall. 
The bending of Strength but still holding.
The metal piece was from a fire escape removed from building in Glens Falls NY.

 ·       ¾ inch Round down post-

This piece intentionally bent, wavy and rusted showing inconstant information coming from the ground level. 
The Questions that remain un-answered about the disaster.

·       The small Off Shoot of ¼” Flat stock-

“fractional pieces”- of stories,  ideas,  thoughts,  energy.
Made as a support in the supporting of each other, human being to human being.
The holding up or up lifting.
Rising.
Each small part played is important to the big picture.

 ·       The circle -

The circle is of inexhaustible implications.
Unity, all encompassing, beginning, end, strength, connection.
The sun and moon, work, human culture, concept of all-inclusive.
All the forces (medical, fire, rescue, military, etc,) that work together so hard in collective efforts.
Polished metal is the representation of the light and opportunities.

In closing-
The remembrance of life lost, given and shared, the innocents of a nation changed and our troops on the front, even now, are also meant to be implied in the over all of this piece.

 In overwhelming gratitude,
miChelle M. Vara

Friday, August 26, 2011

News Artical for Sculpture called "the Guide"

Adirondack Museum acquires new artwork with an old flair



WILTON - Artist miChelle M. Vara used the Adirondack Museum’s logo as inspiration for “The Guide,” a one-of-a-kind sculpture designed and made specially for the museum in Blue Mountain Lake.
The sculpture is intended to capture Adirondack history and the relationship between the wilderness and a guide’s life.
It is 12 feet tall, 15 feet long and five feet wide. It is made with re-thought metal, colored in translucent paint and finished with clear.
Vara has done many historical pieces using recycled metals, funded through grants and the private sector. She chooses metal for its past history to tell a story by way of unconscious perception.
The sculpture was released to the museum July 30.
http://www.hamiltoncountyexpress.com/News/08242011_artwork

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

"Gone 2 Seed"- sculpture

“Gone to Seed” is the sculpture finished and shown for the month of June. This sculpture is made of re-thought metal finished with translucent flip flop color (that dosnt show well in photos) and clear. It opened at a show with John Van Alstine, Gyula Varosy, David Bender, Noah Savett, called “Metal Works” put on by: Jessica Golden. The opening reception was outstanding and the sculpture sold. Detail picture shown below-

A little about the sculpture- The artist says she woke one morning and looked across the sculpture field to see dandelions all in seed sparkling in the harsh morning sun. In the moment she remembered the 3 large buckets of bolts that had been acquired, thinking that would make the perfect material for an extra large sculpture construction. She worked feverishly to the finishing stage at which point she felt translucent flip flop color and clear coat would truly capture the original morning motivation.

Sculpture made of large recycled metal bolts, oil tank, welded. Finished in translucent flip flop sliver/blue and clear.
-Sold
Photos By: Jim Mclaughlin Studio 518-792-5175

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Koi Fish are Fun

Koi Fish- Commissioned functioning sculpture, mail box holder made with recycled materials and finished in color.






Saturday, May 14, 2011

Julius the Moose Sculpture and Mailbox.


We went today to check on the moose sculpture I made in 2000 and he is induring time well. Although the snow plow hit the base, the sculpture its self is doing well having been installed on River Road in Fort Edward NY.

Monday, April 26, 2010

New Acquisition of Bird Sculpture

WoW!!

I LOVE the bird sculpture! I really got a chance to enjoy it today, while I was working around my place.



 THANKS!!!

It's gorgeous!!!!


Susan