Driftwood Wall Art - Flower - Stately. This high quality flower "just is". Big and beautiful, not tamed, but reserved. Put it in your "elegant" room.
Driftwood Wall Art Flower [77]275
Can't you just see the slow-mo movie of this flower opening each morning. That's imaginary, but every aspect of this signature flower is very real. Every detail of a flower is perfectly, artisanally mimicked. This driftwood flower really is for you.
Diameter
67 cm/26.375 in
She creates flowers
Crafting real flowers is the domain of Nature, but artfully crafting “flowers” from driftwood is the specialty of Kitchener, Ontario, Canada artist Barbara Stumpf. It came naturally to Barbara after being raised amongst wildflowers in Northern Ontario and having worked as a floral designer yet it takes a keen creative spirit to envision repurposing what is essentially marine debris into “flowers”.
“I have always admired the unique qualities of driftwood so I finally started to sift through heaps of it along the eastern shores of Lake Huron, one of the five fresh water Great Lakes of North America, and haul some home knowing that one day I would make something from it.” That something was frames for pictures and photographs. Each was crafted as a gift for family members. “While making the frames other shapes and ideas slowly formed. The “flower” is the first of these shapes to materialize.”
Following Nature's penchant for variety Barbara makes small and big flowers that can be flat or uneven (as stamens and pistils often protrude), and either painted or remain as the original colours of the pieces. “Each flower “grows” as I craft it so having an ample supply of different pieces of driftwood is essential because I never know what I will use next because I do not follow a plan or sketch it first – it just grows on the bench before me.”
Barbara applies a sustainability ethos when scouring beaches. Even though she readily admits large pieces of driftwood are tempting she restricts her choices to twigs and small sticks. This practice recognizes that driftwood is marine debris that is subject to the whims of wind and wave so it might be on high quality a beach one day and gone the next, and when it does linger it will be removed during beach maintenance work any way.
The beauty of Nature poses a conundrum. To say it is exquisite over and over again each time one experiences it seems redundant, but each time you experience Nature no one can ignore how exquisite it is and feel the need to say so. Barbara openly and eagerly adores Nature, but she seizes something more than Nature's beauty; she applies Nature's wisdom. For instance, Nature is a prolific repurposer. In fact, it is the original repurposer. Everything in Nature has an intentional purpose and then when that is fulfilled it serves another purpose. Barbara snags the artful use of marine debris. She repurposes what would otherwise float from shore to shore or be tossed aside to make way for a volleyball game instead of using commercialized materials.
Another aspect of Nature this artist respects is that Nature provides. “I use what Nature gives me. I don't bend or break pieces of driftwood to suit me. I trust that Nature has given me the exact, the best pieces for each flower. This makes me think: when I am on the beach am I picking the piece, or is the piece picking me?”
There are residual benefits from strolling beaches looking for driftwood. Barbara has oodles of incredible stories that demonstrate the resilience and power of Nature. She has seen beaches change from season to season and year to year. One year a beach is covered in pebbles from the edge of the beach grass well into the water and the next year sand – the pebbles are gone replaced by sand or the pebbles are covered by sand. One year a beach is very wide and the next, due to higher water levels, it is so narrow you can barely build a sand castle on it. The width of a beach can also change from season to season. For instance, a beach is wide enough for many rows of bathers to claim a patch of it in the Spring and Summer and then in the Autumn the beach is gone as waves pushed by strong winds lap at the edge of the grass. Witnessing this makes every trip to the beach a special and worthwhile experience. Art is the reason for the trips, but astonishment and gratitude are the real outcomes.
Botanists will talk to you about flowers in terms of stigmas, anthers, and sepals and while those parts are important to Barbara's work, she describes the “flowers” she creates in the humbling terms of Nature: distinctive, daring, and just right.