Saturday Art Saves: NeSpoon

 

Photo Source NeSpoon.

Each Saturday I focus on a different artist that I admire. From potters to painters, chefs to collectors, seamstress to songwriters, lifestyle to lovers… anyone who set the paintbrush, pastry brush, hands and heart on fire to create.

Those who inspire art to flow where it may… NeSpoon from Poland.

Photo Source Nespoon

The artist NeSpoon lives in Poland.

NeSpoon is inspired by the traditional lace of her homeland Poland. Her artwork reinterprets lace with materials such as ceramics, plaster, terracotta or wherever she maybe and come across.

NeSpoons takes her art and weaves it , connects it to a place and time.

 

Photo Source NeSpoon

Each piece is hand carved, her work is not reproduced. Each piece is an original.

Photo Source NeSpoon

NeSpoon fills in the cracked piece of pavement with lace,

 

Photo Source NeSpoon
Adds her lace to the lace of a tree trunk.
Photo Source: http://nespoon.blogspot.fr/
Adds a rosette lace piece to a rusty door, 

Photo Source NeSpoon

 

Brings a noticable touch of elegance to an place abandoned.

Urban with a glimpse to the past. i

NeSpoons success she says, "… is making people smile here and there, when they find my installations." 

 

Photo Source NeSpoon

Photo Source NeSpoon

What I admire is NeSpoon takes her art wherever she goes.
Creating something to give back, becoming part of wherever she is.
Beach in Sinai.
"Mr. Sajid House
Mr. Sajid is homeless man, who lives on the beach in the Sinai. He earns by fishing and selling fish to local Bedouins.
Media: hand made laces, rubber band."

 

`
Photo Source NeSpoon
West Bank,
"I know, it's nothing original. But to be there and not to do it it's like to be in Las Vegas and not to play, or to be in Paris and not go to the Eiffel Tower."
Sorry to disagree it is original.
Photo Source NeSpoon
NeSpoons projects do not just include the off beaten path, or the places where she adds her touch to the forgotten, or the broken.

Photo Source NeSpoon
For more information contact:
NeSpoon
at her blog:

http://nespoon.blogspot.fr/
or @

nespoon@gazeta.pl
or
or



Comments

12 responses to “Saturday Art Saves: NeSpoon”

  1. Wow! Her work is amazing. I love the rusting blue doors with the lace. The infill for the pavement would make me stop and think…it is so clever.

  2. Massilianana

    Gorgeous,gogeous,gorgeous ! I particularly like the lace in the pavement ‘s crack. Sooo beautiful !

  3. This work is truly lovely. Thank you Corey for finding this gifted artist. I loved the tree and the pavement. Wouldn’t it be lovely to wander around and find these all over your neighbourhood?

  4. choccaffee@gmail.com

    I couldn’t dream up something this incredible ! I love where she chooses to put her pieces…old, abandoned, unexpected areas…and then, just one small piece. I agree that my favorite pieces are the pavement and the trees. I would love to have a jewel like that in my old pavers somewhere…what a treasure that would be…

  5. kathleen, oregon

    Love this, especially the pavement. Finding something like this would definitely make me smile.
    RE yesterdays post, I would suggest dancing since you love it so much. Maybe Yann could take you dancing for date night once a week. (haha, can’t remember the last time my husband & I had a date night)

  6. Just wonderful!!!’

  7. Yes, WOW! Her work is gorgeous!

  8. NeSpoon’s work is amazing. I love the design she crafted for the homeless gentleman in Sinai — beautiful, unexpected and so inspiring! Thank you for sharing 🙂

  9. Her work is so lovely..you find such amazing artisans

  10. Love this! Great find, Corey.

  11. Corey, Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful work created by an artist with so much vision. Her ability to take an historical art form from around the globe, often created as a woman’s home art, and pushed the designs and structures to a place of inspired fine art. Her ability to combine disparate pieces and make a visual statement that resonates with a huge ahhhh from me, and probably many, many others call out for me to follow her, watch where she is showing her work and hope that one day I can sit and up close look at one of her constructs.
    Thank you so very much for reaching out and finding this magnificent, creative woman to share with your readers.
    Kristin

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