'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.

Masons Jewellers

Product image 1'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 2'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 3'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 4'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.

Regular price $4,400.00 AUD

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'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': a Martini 'glass', with Corona Swizzle Stick. During the past week, the early part of our Self Isolation, I've fabricated this table-piece.
Over the decades, I've made quite a few different such vessels commemorating life events, and this one follows directly on from the very first one that I made, the 'Glass for Solitary Indulgence', for the Sculpture, Objects, Functional Art Expo in Chicago, in 1994, which image and story I posted on my FaceBook Page a couple of weeks ago.
There are a number of levels or layers to this piece, too much to fully go into in this post, but a couple of concepts are interesting enough to elucidate on the why's and wherefores...
I didn't invent the word 'Quarantini': it was coined for a drink somewhere recently, but I liked it so I built on it...
Quarantine has a fabulous history: it defined a period of forty days of isolation (from Italian, quaranta) during the Plague, when ships to Venice were required to ride at anchor for forty days before docking, to prevent the spread of disease. Interestingly, during the Plague, sailors from the Netherlands were the only ones who would risk provisioning London, after they'd firstly fortified themselves with gin, which lead to the expression 'Dutch courage'...
Why forty? Forty has always been a time of trial, based on the number of weeks of human gestation, at the end of which is a result; hence Foundation 41, the medical research organisation, principally investigating the causes of mental and physical handicap in babies, named after the first week of life, and which was based at the Crown Street Women's Hospital, Sydney; I was born there, but that is irrelevant; and the Italian for 'crown' is 'corona', but that is coincidental... And thereafter, the answer to 'life, the universe, and everything' is 42...
So, forty has been the traditional time of trial, ranging from 40 days and nights of rain in the Flood, through to 40 days traditionally spent by religious leaders in isolation, whether atop the mountain, or in the desert, or in the wilderness, or sitting meditating under a tree...
We are fortunate in places like Tasmania: being an island we can close our borders and moat ourselves; the foot of the vessel I've chosen to make triangular, which geometric shape is most frequently associated with Tassie... and the shape continues through the vessel itself... Beyond that, the piece makes use of the triangle, circle, and square, as so much of my work does.
Our quarantining has largely meant an end to commerce in the Arts, and so I feel like I'm on Sabbatical, although an unpaid one: the Sabbatical was traditionally a year off after every seven worked, during which travel or study may be undertaken; well, travel is out, but I have the luxury now of indulging in making table-pieces (objets d'art or objets de vertu, if you will) taking me back decades to a time when I was less 'under the pump', replacing stock, and so on; funnily enough, for years I've said that my best work was still ahead of me...
The Corona Swizzle Stick was one of those inspired moments, playing with the virus motif which we all know so well now; abstracting from it, exploding it open, adapting it to cruciform, lending the piece the overtone of religiosity which is so rife these days; similarly, making the vessel from metal, rather than from glass, lends it overtones of the chalice... No, I'm not espousing, merely reflecting...
I chose Jade, Tasmanian West Coast Jade, for the stem of the vessel: Jade has connotations of origin and popular acceptance as a material, but in the Tasmanian context it is a rare, strong stone, which does not overpower the piece with its decorative presence...
Concerning the making of the piece, it involves raising and hollow-fabrication; stone-cutting and setting; texturing and polishing and gilding; leveling and truing; and silver- and gold-soldering of disparate metals of different colours and karats together; not necessarily in that order; some of it is quite demanding, the difference in scale ranging from 1mm to 115mm (the thickness of the vessel itself is a paper-thin 0.5mm) and constant concentration is a given, so as not to ruin days of work by mishap...
I shall be making a special bespoke case for the routine storage and shipping of this object.
You'll note that I've 'quarantined' the price, based on the number 40, including the similarly reasoned GST amount of $400, although you would be wise to insure it for considerably more than that, but I'm keeping the piece accessible in price to ensure cash flow and the continuation of the business...
Thankyou.

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