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Kathy Vorenberg
from Las Cruces, New Mexico

Third Bi-Annual 2007
ALL DOLLED UP:
BEADED ART DOLL COMPETITION
Theme: Celestial Reflections

Return to the web-page displaying all 6 semi-finalists and overall results

Doll named
Galilea
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After reviewing the Beaded Art Doll Images on this page, and reading the artist's stories, materials list, and summary of techniques,

VOTE & EVALUATE

See the overall Results


When voting closes 1/15/08, voting logs will be reviewed for any duplicate or otherwise illegitimate votes (for example, those from the same IP or email address), and these will be deleted. The on-line votes will be tallied and used to adjust the original votes of the Panel of Judges at CBJA, in the selection of a winner. The public's votes will weigh towards 25% of the final tally in selecting the Winner and Runner-Up.

The Forbidden Quest

Blues, whites, fiery reds and yellows --
overtaking the sky from dusk 'til dawn --
fascinate me, whether in my dreams,
or longings for that something more,
whirling nebulas, mysterious planets and stars I barely see
... my Beaded Art Doll, my celestial reflection, I name you ....

Galilea.

She stood on the rim of the Yshtan Crater as each moonrise left the horizon, waiting for the ninth moon to appear. She prayed that the astral winds would be favorable. It was the eve of the Prime Solstice, the only night possible to view her sacred object, and her telescope stood ready at her side.

When the ninth pale moon broached the horizon, Galilea's heart quickened. She placed a hand on her chest and took a deep breath. Everything depended now on the astral winds. Her theory would be scoffed at once again if she could not produce evidence of her find. Her very existence would be threatened if she failed in this endeavor, for the Kaeloan Council had forbidden her to search the universe for an object that could not possibly exist.

As the ninth moon reached its zenith, a cold wind began to flow around her. Galilea shivered, more in anticipation than from the chill. Patiently, she watched as the veils of cosmic debris lifted and afforded a pristing view of the universe that lay beyond her own star. The astral winds seemed stronger tonight and she was nearly overcome with the breathtaking sight that unfolded above her.


Telescope

Galilea focused her telescope on a distant galaxy, searching for the rare blue planet that she must prove existed. She had armed the telescope with a special device meant to gather that proof and she tempered her eagerness to trigger it until the exact moment the planet came into view. When she located the star at the core of the galaxy, Galilea began a slow sweep of the millions of objects swirling around it. Though many of these objects were much larger than the one she sought, none of them exhibited the qualities necessary for life to exist.

At last, she found the blue planet. Galilea steadied the telescope and prepared to trigger the device attached to it. Behind her, she heard threatening voices and shouts above the din of the terrestrial vehicles climbing the road to the rim of the crater. The Kaeloan Council began to storm the rim.


Face with Headdress

Galilea stood fast and defiantly took another sighting through the telescope. Confidant that the blue planet was still in its sight, she fired a beam directly at it. The beam captured the blue planet and returned a holographic image of it to her outstretched hand. As the blue planet turned on its axis, white clouds swirled across the poles and the outlines of land masses and blue oceans. The planet's atmosphere shimmered in the palm of Galilea's hand.

The members of the Kaeloan Council gasped in recognition of what Galilea had done. She had proven that another planet existed where life was a real possibility. Although they had searched the universe for thousands of years, no other planet had been found with such characteristics. They had given up hope of ever finding life on another planet.

Galilea was a woman of vision and persistence. She was not daunted by narrow thinking or threads. She refused to believe that life could not exist somewhere else out in the vast reaches of the universe. She smiled as she watched the holographic image turning in her hand, and mused what name to give this wondrous orb.

* * * * *

Galileo Galilei was a man of vision and curiousity, so much so that he nearly gave his life to explore the unknown universe. He was forbidden to publish his findings and threatened with death while living in an age which was dominated by austere philosophies. Although his telescope was barely adequate, what he did manage to see beyond the atmosphere of our planet Earth convinced him that the heavens held boundless mysteries to explore and that our planet was but a mere inhabitant of a greater space than one could imagine. He was the first astronomer to study the sun and map the sunspots he saw moving across the sun's surface, observe the moon's craters and Jupiter's satellites.

Who, today, could view the magnificient Hubble photos of the universe without feeling overwhelmed with curiousity and wonder? Who could not be in awe of the photos of millions of stars moving in mysterious configurations deep in the vast blackness of the universe? Galileo would have been thrilled to witness all the recent discoveries made through these photos.


Cosmic Red Square

Galilea is a tribute to Galileo, her head adorned with the golden radiance of our Sun. The upper portion of the front of her gown displays one of the most recent stunning astronomical discoveries, the hot star MWC922 -- the Cosmic Red Square -- a distant bipolar nebula exploding in near perfect symmetry in the constellation Serpens. The three major stars of the Hunter's belt in the Deep Orion Field of the Orion constellation adorn the lower portion of the front of her gown, Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka -- brilliant blue supergiant stars that mark the night sky from late August through mid-January. The Pleiades star cluster, also known as the Seven Sisters, fills the backside of her gown. It is one of the most conspicuous objects in the night sky that is among the first to be marveled at when we are children. The faintest of the stars in this cluster is still 40 times brighter than our own sun. The brightest star in this cluster, Alcyone, is 1000 times more luminous! Cosmic debris such as the veils that Galilea's astral winds disburse can be seen in the vicinity of the Pleiades -- clouds of minute grains of interstellar dust.


Hunter's Belt - Deep Orion Field


Pleiades Cluster

This doll is also a tribute to the men in my life who have fostered and shared a love for exploring the night sky and the universe around us. My father who patiently taught all of his children about the wonders of the night sky. He died many years before the Hubble telescope was launched but he would have become as much of a Hubble photo junkie as I have become, excited beyond measure by each new discovery and enchanted by all of the discoveries. He would have been in awe of the vast numbers and shapes of galaxies that have been documented to date as indeed I am. And my dear husband, who lovingly indulges me with every Hubble photo book that is published, reads every email link to yet another Hubble discovery I send to him, gifts me with the annual Hubble photo calendar -- and who humors my childish delight over each new Hubble photo.

Galilea prompted me to think of many things while she was being created. She evoked memories of nights spent in star dreaming and days filled with yearning to know more about the universe. She also kept whispering lines to me from one of my favorite poets by Robert Frost: "Earth's the right place for love: I don't know where it's likely to go better."

She stands on a reproduction of a sixteenth century astrolabe, perhaps much like one Galileo may have used in his time. The box contains photos of the Cosmic Red Square, the Hunter's Belt in the Deep Orion Field, and the Pleiades cluster and the technical information for these stellar formations.

 

 

 

 




Frontal Image


Side Image


Back Image


Detailed Image

Leap of Faith
(rotation)


List of Materials
and Techniques Employed

Dimensions:
Doll and telescope without base -- 11 1/2 x 7 1/2"

Construction Techniques:
Original cloth doll with wire armature, vinyl doll forearms, and a plaster cone base weight.

Telescope was made with wood handle, acrylic paint, #8 beads, #6 beads, bugle beads, and 16mm antique crystal bead

Materials List:
Paper mache box with lid for base, printout of 16th century astrolabe, stain, and satin varnish

nymo thread - black and white
seed and glass beads -- #6, #8, #11
charlotte beads - #13
crystal beads -- 4mm, 6mm AB bicone, 6mm, 8mm, 10mm AB round
#8 and #11 hex beads
20mm globe bead

Techniques:
Bead embroidery, peyote, sculptural peyote, picot edging, stringing


Kathy Vorenberg
from Las Cruces, New Mexico

Doll named
Galilea
[Please be patient - These pages are graphics intensive and will load slowly]

After reviewing the Beaded Art Doll Images on this page, and reading the artist's stories, materials list, and summary of techniques,

VOTE & EVALUATE

See the overall Results


When voting closes 1/15/08, voting logs will be reviewed for any duplicate or otherwise illegitimate votes (for example, those from the same IP or email address), and these will be deleted. The on-line votes will be tallied and used to adjust the original votes of the Panel of Judges at CBJA, in the selection of a winner. The public's votes will weigh towards 25% of the final tally in selecting the Winner and Runner-Up.

 


   
   


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Contemporizing Traditional Etruscan Jewelry
6/28 thru 7/5, 2008, Cortona, Italy

Toscana Americana has invited Warren Feld of Land of Odds and The Center for Beadwork & Jewelry Arts to lead this 8-day Jewelry Design Workshop.   Enjoy the relaxed pace of Italian living with an in-depth educational experience on your sojourn to Cortona and the Medieval hill towns of Tuscany and Umbria. For both beginner and intermediate level beaders and jewelry makers alike.
Read a
narrative summary of the workshop with links to more informaton about itinerary, supply lists, cortona, the hotel, and fees.

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BE DAZZLED -- the physical store at:
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