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27 posts from functional art

Custom Security Grates with Kinetic Sculpture Design

These two grates are a commission for an apartment building in Texas. Both are made from recycled/reused components (other than the steel for the frame). Both grates have kinetic elements that spin, turn or bobble.

I love adding moving parts to fences, gates and grates to give them a more dynamic and interactive presence.

Announcing Emoodicons— the new mood ring that tells the world how you feel!

http://johntunger.typepad.com/emoodicon/assets/sellbits/emoodicon-rings-icons.jpg

Emoodicons are one of the most exciting ideas I've had in years and I just launched a new blog where you can get your own. Check out the animated short: Marcie's Grand Adventure which shows how Emoodicons work, enter the Make a Face Contest or the Emoodicon Design Contest for a chance to win one of the rings, or read the story of how Emoodicon.com got started. I've been working with some great people to make this a reality and I'm really excited about how it turned out.

What's an Emoodicon, you ask? Well, you know when you’re online and you can just type a couple keys and tell the whole world how you feel? Happy? Angry? Shy? ROFL? In lurve? Don’t you wish real life was that easy? No big discussion. No beating around the bush. No batting your eyes or getting passive aggressive. Just, “This is ME, are you LISTENING?!

Emoodicon Rings make that happen.

They're like a secret decoder ring for your mood. They’re smilies for the real world. They tell everyone just what’s on your mind. “If you don’t know, I’m not going to tell you,” is a phrase you’ll never utter again. If your boyfriend or girlfriend or best friend or evil arch nemesis has eyes, they’ll know. (If they don’t have eyes, no ring will help you. Sorry.) Emoodicon jewelry comes with your choice of 25 mood icons: pick Kitteh or Bleep the Robot. We'll be adding more designs soon so you can mix and match, swap and share, spice it up. Emoodicons are totally customizable. They’re cool, they’re fun, and they won’t break or turn your finger green. Isn’t that a nice change?

Elvis Is Love Mosaic Mirror

elvis is love mosaic
Elvis is Love Mosaic Mirror, 2003
vitreous glass tile, copper, Hardi-backer substrate over plywood.
36" x 36" x 1.5" (approximate)
May be Available

This piece and the What Would Elvis Do? mirror were created for a show of all-Elvis art at Fleur Fine Art in Chicago. Other artists contributing work included folk artists C.M. & Grace Kelly Laster and photographer Patty Carrol.

What Would Elvis Do? Mosaic Mirror

What Would Elvis Do Mosaic
What Would Elvis Do?, Mosaic Mirror, 2003
vitreous glass tile, copper, Hardi-backer substrate over plywood.
30" H x 15" W x 1.5" D (approximate)
May be Available

I really wanted to make this piece into the door of a medicine cabinet…I wasn't allowed to cut big holes in the wall of the gallery, but if you would like it installed as the door to your medicine cabinet, lets talk!

This piece and the  Elvis Is Love mirror were created for a show of all-Elvis art at Fleur Fine Art in Chicago. Other artists contributing work included folk artists C.M. & Grace Kelly Laster and photographer Patty Carrol.

Peter The Crow Mosaic Table

Peter The Crow Mosaic Table
Peter the Crow Mosaic Table, 2002
Glass and ceramic tile mosaic, steel table.
26.5" x 19" x 17" high
Commission

When my dad was young he had a series of pet crows, all named Peter, and Peter was the hero of my bedtime stories. Charles Culver, a well known artist where I grew up, traded a portrait of Peter to my dad for scrap lumber to make picture frames. 50 years later, I traded this mosaic portrait of Peter to my cousin Trina for a set of new tires. The second thumbnail below shows the original Culver portrait the mosaic was based on.

If you'd like to read the Peter the Crow stories I grew up with, I've collected them here.

Peter The Crow Mosaic Table detail Peter The Crow by charles culver
click thumbnails to view larger image. enlarge

Erzuli VeVe Mosaic Table

Erzuli Mosaic Table
Vévé for Erzuli Mosaic Table, 2003
vitreous glass, glass gems, steel table.

30" Tall x 42" x 42"
Commission

Laurie Beasley of Ridge Art commissioned this table, featuring a version of the Vévé for Erzulie, the Haitian goddess (Lwa) of love.

Erzuli Mosaic Table

El Corazon Mosaic Table

El corazon mosaic Table
Corazon Mosaic Table, 2002
ceramic tile mosaic, steel table.
30" x 48" x 17" high
Commission

This table was commissioned by Angelo at Casa Loca in Chicago. The original design is from the Mexican Loteria deck, a traditional game similar to Bingo.  I had long wanted to do a mosaic based on the Mexican Loteria deck, and this image in particular. I wish I had better pictures of this piece… it's much cooler than you can tell from these images.

Teresa Villegas did a very cool updated version of the loteria game which has now been published in in a handsome book. I highly recommend checking out her site devoted to the project, which provides a good deal of background on the game and images. You can also learn more by visiting this website from Boston University on the History of the Mexican Loteria Card Game.

El corazon mosaic Table loteria mosaic Table heart mosaic Table
click thumbnails to view larger image. enlarge

After the Matador, Folk Art Mosaic Table

mosaic Bull
After the Matador, 1998
ceramic tile, glass, steel on wood.

26" x 46" x 1.5" high
Buy this mosaic at ArtBuzz

This is the very first mosaic I ever did.

I made it shortly after moving to Chicago, as a kitchen table for my first real studio. Shortly after I finished it, I participated in my first Pilsen East Artists’ Open House, an annual event in the neighborhood. I had a ton of great art filling the studio but the two questions I heard most were, "Wow. What's the rent here?" and "How much is the table?" Heh. By the end of the first day, I was sooooo tired of explaining that the table wasn't for sale, it was what we ate on. But by day two of the three day show, I was thinking "Hmmmm, maybe I should do more of these mosaics thingies."

Some years back I removed the legs and made it a wall hanging piece, but it would be very simple to put legs on it again if you wanted a table. I think it works really nicely as a mural. The frame is made from antique yardsticks that happened to be the same orange and yellow as the tile. The bull's eye is a Xerox copier lense behind which is a photo of an eye. Actually, it's a photo of a television showing a big eye, but you can't really see the TV. The bull's horn is made from old roofing steel set into the tile.

Virgin Of Guadalupe Folk Art Mosaic Table

Virgin of guadalupe
Virgin of Guadalupe, 1999
ceramic tile, glass, china, mirror, found wooden table.

50" x 32" x 17.5" high
private collection

The design for this table was inspired by murals in the Pilsen Neighborhood of Chicago. This was my second mosaic and the last one to use broken china. Although the china looked good in this context, I learned that it did not make a particularly flat table surface…

La Femme Astrale Mosaic Table

Astrale mosaic table
La Femme Astrale, 1999
ceramic tile, plywood substrate.

24" x 48" x 17" high
May be Available

The design for this table was adapted from a 19th Century French poster for a floating woman act.… This is one of a set of four tables I did in collaboration with Neil Verplank. The orange background tile is really nice vintage stuff from the Sixties that I discovered way, way deep in a warehouse in southern Michigan.

floating woman magic poster mosaic table
John T. Unger