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VIDEO: Designing for ArtsThrive 2017

Jack Boglioli featured in Artsthrive 2017

I was recently invited to come up with a piece to show in the 2017 ArtsThrive exhibition and benefit at the Albuquerque Museum. It will be my first time participating in this event, which has been occurring annually for the past twenty seven years.

ArtsThrive will begin on October 20th this fall and run for six weeks into December. Over 100 artists will be participating. In addition, a percentage of the sales of our work will be used to fund museum run educational programs for children and families.

About This ArtsThrive Video

I created this video in order to give my audience a behind the scenes look at my preparation for the exhibit. The video highlights my design process from start to finish, for one of the pieces which is now being created. I am actually creating three to four pieces total, and the best piece of the bunch will be the one displayed in the show.

Here is the video, enjoy!

As always, thank you for continuing to follow and support my work. Click the following link if you want to find out more about the 2017 ArtsThrive event:

CLICK HERE

In addition, if you would like to view the list of participating artists, click this link:

PARTICIPATING ARTIST

Also, did you like the time lapse video of my design process? Here is a link to another video you might enjoy:

Designing A Tiger’s Eye Pendant

Finally, if you have any questions or comments, leave them in the reply form below. It doesn’t matter if you love what I am doing or if you totally hate it, let me know. I always enjoy being part of the conversation.

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My Creative Influences Part 3: Michelangelo

Jack Boglioli inspired by Michelangelo

“The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark.” ~Michelangelo

Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni was born on March 6th, 1475 as the son of a judicial administrator in Caprese, Tuscany. His family moved to Florence just a few months after his birth. His mother became ill when he was just six years old. Consequently he went to live with a wet nurse and her husband, who happened to be a stonecutter. According to Michelangelo this is where he acquired his skill.

“Along with the milk of my nurse I received the knack of handling chisel and hammer”

Later in life, after his apprenticeship as a teen, it seems like nothing could stop him from rising quickly to the heights of accomplishment. A Cardinal commissioned him at the age of 23 to carve the famous “Pieta”, and he completed the “David” (one of the most famous statues in the world) before age 30.

The Life’s Work of Michelangelo

In 1505, he was invited by Pope Julius II to Rome. The Pope wanted Michelangelo to design and create his tomb. This project was to become the artist’s magnum opus. It was a manifestation of his unbridled ambition, and he would continue work on the project throughout his life.

Tomb of Pope Julius Design

The tomb was to include over forty statues and be finished in just five years of concentrated effort. However, the Pope provided constant interruptions for the sculptor. As a result the project was drawn out over a forty year period in which Michelangelo was never satisfied enough to call it done. One such interruption was the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, a monumental creation which only took four years to complete.

Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel

This wasn’t even something the artist wanted to do, because he considered himself a sculptor, not a painter. Pretty good for an annoying little side project.

Those who knew him described Michelangelo as someone who was absorbed in his work and not attracted to the comforts of the world. One associate said that he ate “more out of necessity than of pleasure”. He also “withdrew himself from the company of men” which is according to some a common indicator of genius.

Michelangelo died at the age of 88. He outlived Leonardo Da Vinci and Raphael by forty years. Some might say he also accomplished much more, having a biography written within his own lifetime. He produced great works of sculpture, fresco, architecture and poetry, and each one of them could have served as the life’s work of any ordinary man.

“But the task of the artist is not to be ordinary. It is to be extraordinary.”

And this is something that requires great ambition.

To learn more about the life and work of Michelangelo, follow these links:

Brilliant high quality images: ARTSY – Michelangelo Buonarroti

The in depth story: Biography

Thank You

In conclusion to this series about my creative influences, I have to thank you for taking the time to enjoy these articles. I hope this has provided you with a more complete picture of who I am and what drives me to create. Writing these articles has been a journey of discovery in itself. What I’d like to discover now is what you think. What inspires you? What gives you a sense of awe? 

Leave a comment below to join the conversation.

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Time Lapse Video: Watch The Design Process

I made this time lapse video in order to give you more of a look behind the scenes of how I do what I do. This short video shows the design process I go through with every piece I make. This video is only 60 seconds long but the actual amount of time put into this design was around 60 to 90 minutes. After that is the actual creation of the piece.

The finished piece contains a tiger’s eye stone. Surrounding and setting the stone is a woven silver pattern that follows it’s circumference continuously, with out a starting or finishing point. Although a simple feature, this is not something you are often going to see elsewhere.

Want to know more about what I do? START HERE

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My Creative Influences Part 2: Benjamin Franklin

Jack Boglioli inspired by Benjamin Franklin

“As a creative type, I feel a need to study anyone, living or dead, who has accomplished anything that can be considered great.”

Of the many who fall into this category, Franklin is one of my favorites…

He was a renowned author, printer, political theorist, statesman, and scientist. He excelled at nearly everything he did. He performed many functions in his world, but the one that inspires me the most is his role as inventor.

Benjamin Franklin as postmaster.

Franklin’s spirit of innovation bore into the world the lightning rod, bifocals, the glass harmonica, electricity, and even the ideas that helped to shape the Declaration of Independence. His problem solving abilities seemed to have no limit to what they could accomplish.

Behind this unending ability to apply new ways of thinking to every facet of his work, must have been a constant burning desire to create.

This is clearly demonstrated in his quote:

 “To cease to think creatively is to cease to live”

~Benjamin Franklin

If I can emulate in my work even a shred of this capacity to constantly look at things in a new light, challenge the status quo, and attempt things no one has done before, I will be more than satisfied.

That is why innovation, or the need to constantly adventure into uncharted areas in terms of design, is one of the core values of Jack Boglioli Jewelry™.

For more information about the life of Benjamin Franklin you can follow this link: Franklin Biography

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My Creative Influences Part 1: Gothic Design

Jack Boglioli inspired by gothic design

Who are my major creative influences as an artist? That’s the question I aim to answer with this series of short articles. This one being the first part of five.

From artists to architects to historical thinkers, these are the creative minds I have found myself resonating with on the deepest level so far. Some in the aesthetic sense, and some in the way I apply myself to my work.

Abbot Suger – First Patron Of Gothic Design

Abbot Suger, born circa 1081, was a French monastic, statesmen and historian. What does this have to do with my work? Let’s start with a story.

Around the year 1137 Suger made the decision to rebuild the Curch of Saint-Denis. This was the burial church of the monarchs of France, two of which he happened to be rubbing shoulders with, Louie VI and Louie VII.

As the guiding visionary of the project, Suger oversaw the reconstruction with the help of innovative master masons, the names of whom we do not know. Out of this project came several new features, which had evolved out of the earlier romanesque style. The pointed arch, ribbed vaults, flying buttresses, and the earliest known example of a rose window.

The new structure was finished on the 11th of June 1144, and became the prototype for further constructions in northern France. It is cited as the first ever building of the Gothic style.

If my personal aesthetic could ever be summed up with one single style of design, it would have to be Gothic.

Why Gothic?

Opus Francigenum (“French work”) as it was referred to in it’s time, displays a level of attention to detail unparalleled by anything of it’s age (and region). This principle shows up in every aspect of the buildings from their notoriously ornate facades to the awe inspiring rose windows that illuminate the interior. No square inch is left untended to or undecorated.

Gothic Design Comparison Jack Boglioli

It is this inextinguishable need for creative attention to be applied to an object from every possible angle, that I want to carry out in my own pieces. In this type of work, everything ceases to matter while all possible avenues to perfection are explored.

“Being the one who creates them, I never think that my pieces are absolutely perfect or finished. But as an artist, perfection must always be my pursuit.”

Suger and other founders of Gothic design, in their pursuit of perfection, finished with something pretty substantial in the end. The results of their labor, to me, are nothing short of awe inspiring.

For more extensive information regarding Gothic design, follow this link: Gothic Design

Part 2

In the next part of this series, I will be revealing another of my creative influences. A historical figure who may seem unconventional as an artist’s inspiration. However, the attitude with which he approached his creative endeavors is something I cannot ignore…