I feel I often begin posts by talking about how excited I am, and am
probably getting dangerously close to sounding like I'm perennially
hopped-up on something, so, despite the fact that I AM really excited
about this announcement, I'm going to refrain from stating that. At least, not first.

I've so appreciated all the love folks have shown me, and support for
Hieropice. I think, as an artist, you've got to keep innovating,
changing, doing new things, to keep your brain from atrophying, or
burning out. As I was making one of many made-to-order terrarium
necklaces recently, I thought, man, I am working SO small, the vessel is
so tiny, I really wish I could expand this and create a whole landscape
in this thing! And my next thought was, um.....
I can! So, I started
thinking about ways to create miniature landscapes under glass, and for
some reason, the first thing that came to mind was Tucson, Arizona,
where I lived after high school. The desert there was the most
surprising place I'd been to-date; contrary to my impressions from back
East, it was not "deserted" at all, but full of life, and amazing
shifting color palates that revolved around the movements of the sun. I
saw more shapes, colors and textures in the desert than any landscape
I'd encountered previously, and an abundance of plants with romantic
names like "agave" and "
ocotillo." And weird things, inexplicable stacks of boulders balanced on the edge of a cliff, oversized cactus blossoms that
only bloom at night and just once a year, and an aspen forest, covered in snow at the peak of
Mt. Lemmon in the middle of the city, while miles below, it was eighty degrees and sunny.
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Barrel Cactus Detail |
Yeah, all kinds of weird and wondrous, but memories of the desert
haunt me now that I've moved back to the northeast, and it seemed
fitting to create my first landscape from those memories. And so, I am
introducing the first of Hieropice's new one-of-a-kind Landscape
Terrarium Necklaces, the Sonoran Desert Terrarium Necklace.
My
goal with this new line is to experiment with vessel shapes and sizes,
creating miniatures incorporating a variety of techniques, like
re-creating miniature plants from bits and pieces of other ones,
hand-painting, dyeing, etc., with a focus on realism.
This first piece
includes a miniature barrel cactus that I impregnated with a slew of
little wire spines, a stack of stones that I created to match my
memories of
Mt. Lemmon, lichen tumbleweeds and layers of sand that I hand-dyed, to recreate the changing landscape of the desert. Red-tipped agave,
cholla,
and of course, the iconic Saguaro cactus, that the Arizona desert would
be bereft without. There are a lot of other goodies tucked in there,
and the piece so reminds me of the
Sonoran, I wish I could crawl into it!
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Agave Detail |
The new one of a kind (ooak) pieces will be just that, never to be reproduced,
so when they're sold, they're gone. But I hope their new owners will
enjoy having pieces that are unique, and knowing the one they own is the
only one in existence. I'll be listing the new pieces on
Etsy as I make them, so stay tuned for future landscapes!