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Anika Smulovitz
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breathe
Burden
Loss of Innocence
body in motion
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Anika Smulovitz
Portfolio
Social Action
breathe
Burden
Loss of Innocence
body in motion
Keys
Meditation: a collaborative project
Gestation
White Collar
Wedding Doves
Lips
Chocolate
Herbarium Specimen Rings
Judaica
Shop
News
Publications
Classroom Demos
About/Contact
Folder: Portfolio
Judaica
Shop
News
Publications
Classroom Demos
About/Contact
Back
Social Action
breathe
Burden
Loss of Innocence
body in motion
Keys
Meditation: a collaborative project
Gestation
White Collar
Wedding Doves
Lips
Chocolate
Herbarium Specimen Rings
Shop breathe 11
Smulovitz_breathe11.jpg Image 1 of
Smulovitz_breathe11.jpg

breathe 11

$2,400.00

necklace
sterling silver, fine silver, reclaimed wood from the Wawona Schooner, beach glass/rocks/shell from San Juan Island (WA), freshwater pearls, silk string
9” x 7” x 3/8”
photographed by Doug Yaple
2017

______________________________
As an adornment artist, I am interested in the relationship between object and wearer. I explore the creation of self-awareness and the transformation of intimate physical understandings of the body. Is it possible to evoke the act of breathing in a static object with material choices? This body of work explores questions about the body and the intimate personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

In 2011, I began exploring the breath and the possibility of evoking the act of breathing in a static object through form and material choices. At the time, this work was directly influenced by the experience of witnessing my father dying in a hospital bed – watching a ventilator breath for him while trying to ground myself through my own breath. This work tries to capture the power of our breath, the necessity of breathing, and the ability of wearable objects to tune the wearer into this power.

With fear ever present in our “Age of Terror,” grounding ourselves in the present, focusing on our breath, is essential to move past the fear and work towards hope. My early works in this series used repurposed single-use plastic bags and repurposed thrift store clothing. These materials were used to emphasize the connection between our ability to breathe and our environment, and the necessity to act as good stewards to our environment. I have begun to incorporate using found wood with this work to further push the connection between our ability to breath and the trees that provide us the oxygen we need. Climate change and the increasing, constant, devastating wildfires around the globe, add to the fear, making the need to focus on our breath even more pressing. Breathe in – 2 – 3 – 4 – Hold – 2 – 3 - 4 - Breathe Out – 2 – 3 – 4…

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necklace
sterling silver, fine silver, reclaimed wood from the Wawona Schooner, beach glass/rocks/shell from San Juan Island (WA), freshwater pearls, silk string
9” x 7” x 3/8”
photographed by Doug Yaple
2017

______________________________
As an adornment artist, I am interested in the relationship between object and wearer. I explore the creation of self-awareness and the transformation of intimate physical understandings of the body. Is it possible to evoke the act of breathing in a static object with material choices? This body of work explores questions about the body and the intimate personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

In 2011, I began exploring the breath and the possibility of evoking the act of breathing in a static object through form and material choices. At the time, this work was directly influenced by the experience of witnessing my father dying in a hospital bed – watching a ventilator breath for him while trying to ground myself through my own breath. This work tries to capture the power of our breath, the necessity of breathing, and the ability of wearable objects to tune the wearer into this power.

With fear ever present in our “Age of Terror,” grounding ourselves in the present, focusing on our breath, is essential to move past the fear and work towards hope. My early works in this series used repurposed single-use plastic bags and repurposed thrift store clothing. These materials were used to emphasize the connection between our ability to breathe and our environment, and the necessity to act as good stewards to our environment. I have begun to incorporate using found wood with this work to further push the connection between our ability to breath and the trees that provide us the oxygen we need. Climate change and the increasing, constant, devastating wildfires around the globe, add to the fear, making the need to focus on our breath even more pressing. Breathe in – 2 – 3 – 4 – Hold – 2 – 3 - 4 - Breathe Out – 2 – 3 – 4…

necklace
sterling silver, fine silver, reclaimed wood from the Wawona Schooner, beach glass/rocks/shell from San Juan Island (WA), freshwater pearls, silk string
9” x 7” x 3/8”
photographed by Doug Yaple
2017

______________________________
As an adornment artist, I am interested in the relationship between object and wearer. I explore the creation of self-awareness and the transformation of intimate physical understandings of the body. Is it possible to evoke the act of breathing in a static object with material choices? This body of work explores questions about the body and the intimate personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

In 2011, I began exploring the breath and the possibility of evoking the act of breathing in a static object through form and material choices. At the time, this work was directly influenced by the experience of witnessing my father dying in a hospital bed – watching a ventilator breath for him while trying to ground myself through my own breath. This work tries to capture the power of our breath, the necessity of breathing, and the ability of wearable objects to tune the wearer into this power.

With fear ever present in our “Age of Terror,” grounding ourselves in the present, focusing on our breath, is essential to move past the fear and work towards hope. My early works in this series used repurposed single-use plastic bags and repurposed thrift store clothing. These materials were used to emphasize the connection between our ability to breathe and our environment, and the necessity to act as good stewards to our environment. I have begun to incorporate using found wood with this work to further push the connection between our ability to breath and the trees that provide us the oxygen we need. Climate change and the increasing, constant, devastating wildfires around the globe, add to the fear, making the need to focus on our breath even more pressing. Breathe in – 2 – 3 – 4 – Hold – 2 – 3 - 4 - Breathe Out – 2 – 3 – 4…

Anika Smulovitz

anikasmulovitz@gmail.com

Boise, Idaho

Smulovitz_breathe11.jpg