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John
Babcock
lives and works at his
studio near Santa
Cruz, California. His medium is paper, and
his work has been shown in over thirty major museums in Europe, the United States and Japan. Shows include
"Craft Today ,USA",
organized by the American Craft Museum in New York, "The Artful Object,
Recent American Craft" at the Fort Wayne Art Museum, and "The Cutting
Edge, New Directions in Hand Made Paper", organized by the Kalamazoo
Institute
of Art. He has lectured and conducted workshops throughout the United States and in India including sessions for the
Southwest School of Art and Craft in San Antonio, Texas; The University of
Wisconsin; The University of Hawaii; The University of California, Santa Barbara; Haystack Mountain School
of Crafts; and most recently at the Maharaja Sayajirao University in India. His work is
included in many public and
private collections including The Museum of Art and Design, New York, New York.
John’s
art reflects a unique exploration of color relationships to evoke an
emotional
response. About his
work he states, “I gravitate to earth forms
for inspiration,
because perhaps, much of the colors that I use are earth-derived
pigments. I
have drawn upon images that come to me when I contemplate the pulsating
or
vibrating nature of waves, windblown sand, or Japanese rock gardens. I
seek to
capture the essence of these experiences and document them through the
peculiarities of colored paper.”
He
uses paper of his own manufacture to build art works of poured, cast,
inlaid,
and collaged paper. John
manipulates
various types of wet pigmented pulps, of cotton, kozo, and abaca fibers
on
large surfaces. Each
type of fiber
reflects light differently in its dry state. One
of
the results of the fiber manipulation
in the
work is the way the
imagery changes focus, some images recede or appear as the viewer moves
from
side to side in front of the work, or as the light of day changes. These unique qualities
give his work a sense
of mystic delight as one discovers the piece over time.
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