title

Darlece Cleveland, Artist

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Micole as Siren Framed

I've framed "Micole as Siren".  Micole will be here on Tuesday to take it homeIt's always hard to part with a piece of art.  They become like a child in a way.  I'm happy it's going to her though.  She really likes it and I did create it as a study for a larger version I hope to paint within the next year.

I changed the background of the painting a little.  I hadn't made it large enough to fit the frame I bought.  I had to paint out to the edges.  The only real difference though is I added some green on the left and then thought it looked at little like leaves being taken up by the wind.  So I emphasized the shapes a bit to make them look more like leaves.  I then added some red to the water lilly bud to the right of Micole.  I also signed and dated it.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Yosemite Valley View, Tree of Life Mural-Donor Wall Header


I just delivered the Tree of Life Donor Wall header plaque to the Yosemite Valley School.  This will go next to the mural with Half Dome plaques for each person, family, or business that donated money or substantial time to the mural.  I still have to finish glazing 8 more plaques.  There are 16 plaques besides this one.  The header plaque measures approx. 19  by 8 inches.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Yosemite Tree of Life Mosaic Mural




The Yosemite Valley School "Tree of Life Mural" now hanging in the front of the school. It's 6 feet in diameter and weighs quite a bit because it's all glass and clay and has an iron frame welded onto it. Thank you to my wonderful husband Steve and his buddies for hanging it. What a relief! 3 years in the making. This was a collaboration between the students, staff and the Yosemite and El Portal communities under my direction. I also created quite a few pieces for it. Special thanks to Laurie Smith, her dad Bill and daughter Rachel, Oliana Reynolds, Catherine Soria and Henrietta De Groot for all of their hard work in helping to complete this project.

I've included some close ups of various areas of the mural. Laurie's Quail and her daughter Rachel's River Mermaid are in the lower, center of the mural.
 



Besides being a "Tree of Life" piece it also depicts the four seasons.  The photo at left shows part of the spring section.





 




This is a branch from the Pacific Dogwood
tree.
























This section of the mural shows the Miwok people and The Yosemite Valley School.


I'll be posting more closeups soon.  Right now I'm off to the Vashon Island Garden Tour.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Handmade Bookmarks by Darlece J. Cleveland



Here are some samples of bookmarks I’ve been making and selling for a number of years now.  Currently, they’re being sold by The Ansel Adams Gallery in Yosemite National Park.  These are the smaller size which, with the ribbon, measure 2 inches by 11 inches.  The larger size are 2 1/2 inches by 14 inches and are great for hardcover books.

UPDATE!!! 10-28-11
The bookmarks are no longer available.  That means they're now collectors items so hold onto them!

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Yosemite Valley School "Tree of Life Mural" Update



We finally got all of the pieces glued down and then grouted the whole mural.  Five different colors of grout were used because we have a four seasons kind of thing going on.  We had to tape all of the adjacent areas to keep the grout from spreading.  It took us two days to grout the whole thing.  Now Laurie's going to clean it up with some vinegar and water to get the slight haze left by the grout off the tiles and glass.  Then my husband, Steve, will move the piece outside and mount it on the wall above the site of the native plant garden.  Steve actually welded the frame for the mural and the pieces are glued to cement backer board. It's taken us three years to get to this point!  Mainly because the majority of the labor on this was volunteer time.  Once it's mounted outside a border of ceramic leaves will be glued to the perimeter.  The whole thing measures six feet across.  I'm still working on finishing up the Half Dome and Valley View donor plaques which will be mounted next to the mural.  If you're in Yosemite Valley you can view the mural at the Yosemite Valley School which is located in the NPS housing area below Yosemite Falls.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Chickadoodle! Pot


This is a pot I made for my friend Bridget who lives near the summer camp I used to teach at.  I went to visit her at her beautiful f 1800's farmhouse during the summer of 2009.  While I was there she showed me her new chicks and kept calling out "chikadoodles!" while we threw them Japanese beetles, borage and nasturtiums to feast on.  This inspired me to create the Chickadoodle pot pictured here.  There is an inscription that says "For Bridget" on the bottom but I told her if she wants it she has to come visit me in Washington.  It's a bribe to get her out here.  Bridget hasn't seen the piece yet.  This will be her first chance to view it.  Thanks for the inspiration Bridget!

The pot measures 6 3/4" tall and is low fire clay with under and over glazes.

Summer Pots

These are some ceramic pieces I did the first and second summers I taught at Camp Chateaugay in Upstate New York.  They're lowfire and I love the bright colors.  They're small, the tallest one measuring 6" in height.

Micole as Siren

Here's a painting I did of my daughter, Micole.  For some reason birds are attracted to her.  There is a metaphor here but I'm not going to explain it.  I'll let the viewer figure it out for themselves.  It measures about 10"x11" and is acrylic on paper.  I was thinking of it as a study for a larger painting.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Monarch Polymer Clay Chrysalis-work in progress


I was doing some research on polymer clay as I'll be incorporating a piece into one of my mosaic murals. The new work will be based on the monarch butterfly and the Spanish word Mariposa which translates to butterfly.  I sculpted a polymer clay chrysalis for the center of the piece and then painted it with acrylic paints.  The finished work measures about 5 1/2 by 3 1/2 inches.  Under the chrysalis will be a light fixture so that it glows.  I don't really care for the plastic look of it.  I think I'll overlay the piece with another very thin layer of translucent polymer clay which is what I've been using for it so far.  Then the painted piece underneath will show through and look more like an actual chrysalis does without, hopefully, looking so plastic as the rest of the piece will be glazed clay and glass.  This is new territory for me as my work in polymer clay has been tiny to say the least.  Just some fun stuff in the past with the kids.  A couple of years ago I saw some work on the internet by an artist who makes lamp sconces out of the clay that were amazing.  Can't find the stuff anymore.

While researching polymer clay I came across a Canadian artist named Marina Bychkova, http://www.enchanteddoll.com/,who creates incredible porcelain doll/sculptures.  She's from Vancouver and is showing at the Dragonspace gallery on Granville Island during the Winter Olympics this year.  I'd love to go up and see her work as I'm just south in Washington state.  I hate to even call these dolls as they're each an incredible piece of art.  She also has a blog, http://www.enchanteddoll.com/blog/, where she talks about her process.  I'm not really into dolls in general but like I said these are pieces of art.  Makes me want to try something like this.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Blue Heron and Hamsas

Here is a blue heron clay piece I made while directing the ceramics program at Camp Chateaugay in upstate New York.  I worked there for the last three summers.  Unfortunately a crack formed on the left side.  I'll be using it in a mosaic and the crack will fill in with grout so I think it will be okay.  This is porcelain with underglazes on the herons body.  The background is regular glazes.  I absolutely love blue herons!


  
These are hamsa hands and were created by me as samples for a project I had the campers work on.  The children made them by placing their hand on the clay and tracing around it.  They then cut out the pocket and attached it to the hand.  

The oldest hamsas originated in the Middle East. They are believed to bring their owner happiness, health, good luck and fortune.  I hang mine on the wall and put fresh cut flowers in them.  One of my students told me that in Jewish homes they are hung on the wall near the front door. Then a prayer is written on a piece of paper, folded and placed in the hamsa.





Bird/Sconce Mosaic


Here's a wall piece I made a couple of years ago which incorporates a bird tile made by another artist named Parran Collery and  a glass wall sconce shade.  I also used broken cups, plates, and glass beads.  There are leaves surrounding the entire piece which I made out of clay  All of the empty spaces between where filled in with stained glass.  It looks very nice a night when the sconce is lit. The whole piece measures approx. 24 x 30 inches.


I really enjoy making ceramic/glass mosaic murals which incorporate light.  It adds another dimension to the piece.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Yosemite Valley School Mural

Here's the Yosemite Valley School Mural.  It's much further along than this now.  I expect it to be finished and hanging up by the end of  May, 2010.  My friends Laurie, a teacher's aide at the school, and Catherine Soria, the principal, have been painstakingly cutting and gluing small pieces of stained glass to insert into the background around the ceramic pieces. Laurie's father, daughter and several other's have helped as well.  This mural is six feet in diameter.  My husband welded a huge metal frame for it and it's going to weigh a lot when it's done.  It will be mounted on a wall at the front of the school and a native plant garden will be planted around it.  We've been working on this one for about 3 years now.  It was inspired by a "tree of  life" mural we saw in Dunbar, Scotland 4 years ago.  It's kind of a sister school which the Yosemite School visits every 3 years.  John Muir was born in Dunbar but as a child immigrated to Wisconsin with his family before moving onto the west coast as a young man.  The Dunbar school visits Yosemite as well.

Mariposa Library Mural

This is a mural I supervised and helped create with the Mariposa Homeshool Coop.  It is ceramic and glass.  In the center of the mural is the Mariposa County Courthouse which is the oldest, continuously operated courthouse in California.  On the tower is an actual working clock.  Students created at least one piece for the mural and I did the courthouse and other pieces as well.  The border is composed of native plants and birds from the area.  Much of Yosemite National Park is withing the county borders so Half Dome is includedThis mural was donated to the Mariposa County Library where it is hangs now.  There is a tiny library just to the left of the Courthouse.

Janette's Yosemite Ceramic Mosaic Mural



Here's an earlier mosaic I did for Janette Gamble's retirement. She was the principal at the Yosemite Valley School for a number of years. This piece is approx. 2 1/2 by 2 1/2 feet. The green lady (which resembles Janette) below Half Dome has a light in the top of her head which reflects on the dome. There is also stained glass in her eyes so they glow when the light is on.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Gymnastics Mosaic Mural




Hello all. Thought I'd join the crowd and start blogging. Actually it's a great forum for me to share what I've been up to creatively. I'm new to this so patience please.

The image above is a mural I created for Camp Chateaugay. I was the director of their ceramics program for three summers beginning in 2007. It measures approx. 4 x 4 feet square and is mounted in their gymnastics area. I'm currently finishing a six foot diameter "Tree of Life/Four Seasons" ceramics and glass mural for the Yosemite Elementary School in Yosemite National Park, Calif. It's a collaboration between students, myself, teachers and the local community in Yosemite and has been in process for 3 years. It should be finished by May of this year. The school is creating a native plant garden and the mural will be on a wall facing it. I'll post pictures of it when it is finished.


I've moved from Yosemite to Vashon Island in Washington State. I'm hoping to create murals here and am currently setting up my studio.