Tiki Central / Tiki Carving
Tiki Ambassadors
Pages: 1 7 replies
TM
Tiki Mon
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Nov 10, 2003 8:40 AM
Since joining this forum (recommended to me by one of my palmwood suppliers) I've seen the coolest tiki creations. Excellent carvings, paintings and jewelry, as well as molded forms and ceramic work. All of you are to be commended for your commitment and dedication to tiki art. Regardless of our goals as artisans, we have one common thread that links us together. We are all potential ambassadors of Tiki. Therefore, I encourage you to show your work. Let it be seen, both on this forum and (even more important) out in public. How and why you exhibit your creations is not as important as the exhibition itself. As we all know, the Art of Tiki possesses a strange and potent magic. Most people don't know why they like it; they just like it. And the more tiki art they see, the more they'll appreciate, buy, collect, and perhaps create their own tiki art. So, by exhibiting we will:
Okay, I'm off my soapbox... |
T
tikitony
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posted
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Tue, Nov 11, 2003 1:10 PM
nice words Tiki Mon. I have a hard time considering my tikis art. I think of "art" as something that's challenging culture, I feal like I'm just supplying culture. Maybe I feal this way, because I have a fine arts education, where craft alone was not considered enough to be thought provoking. I'm not saying that you couldn't use tiki as a vehicle to make something thought-provoking, but it will probably never be considered "fine art". Maybe thats my confusion, "fine art" vs. "art", is there a difference? Also, the cultures that we have "borrowed" tiki from is hardly considered. Chiki tiki and I were just talking about this dillema as were others in the post "Just a piece of wood?" by jungletrader. Since we are mimicing a cultural artifact to make it our own, we dillute the original meaning of these once religous/ ancestoral images. Since the start of the Polynesian Pop era carvers have created a new genre which allowed non-islanders the permission to carve tikis, but I still struggle with whether I'm harmfully misrepresenting Polynesian culture or not. Because all of us here embrace tiki, and purchase tiki, it sometimes makes me forget about the cultures which I'm taking from. I wonder, if there's anyway we could repay (not monetary) the culture we borrow from? I think one of the most brilliant people we have on TC is Basement Kahuna, he knows more about cultural tools, and implements that he shares with us, more than anyone I can think of. He knows polynesian pop but also cultural background which we should all take the time to learn, because thats the meaningful knowledge that should be passed along, especially since that's the cultures we're borrowing from. By knowing the cultural signifigance of artifacts and sharing, maybe this could be our contribution back to Polynesian cultures. So, to get back to your OG(original) words Tiki Mon, the artists here should learn and share their knowledge of Oceanic cultural when displaying their work. After all, its not just wood, paper, canvas, metal, or clay when we're finished with it! tHanks for the post Tiki Mon. |
TC
Tiki Chris
Posted
posted
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Tue, Nov 11, 2003 1:33 PM
tiki tony: well said! |
TM
Tiki Mon
Posted
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Tue, Nov 11, 2003 3:31 PM
Tiki Tony, |
B
Benzart
Posted
posted
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Mon, Jan 26, 2004 8:36 PM
|
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tikifreak
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posted
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Tue, Jan 27, 2004 7:00 AM
[ Edited by: tikifreak on 2004-01-27 07:17 ] |
F
FLOUNDERart
Posted
posted
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Tue, Jan 27, 2004 9:20 AM
TikiMon is MIA. My guess is he's in jail. |
B
Benzart
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posted
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Tue, Jan 27, 2004 12:30 PM
Thats strange. How did this thread get to the top of the page yesterday? |
Pages: 1 7 replies