Saturday, October 31, 2009
hAPpY hALLOwEeN
Friday, October 30, 2009
Olivia makes a Babka (Slavik Granny) Doll
Thursday, October 29, 2009
ADO Featured Artist: LoopyBoopy
Please tell us about yourself. What is your name? Where do you live? What makes you tick?
My name is Colleen Downs. I live in the magical city of New Orleans. What makes me tick? That is a big one....many things I suppose. I love life, I love being wacky and having fun.
When did you start making dolls? Why did you start making dolls?
I've been sculpting figures since I was just a wee one. My mom was a potter in the 70s and had a great pottery studio with all the clay and glazes. My sister and I used to make these creepy head beads, I suppose those where my first dolls. I've always been drawn to people, where others are inspired by nature I've always been inspired by people. Emotions and feelings of people are just an endless source of inspiration for me. So much of the way we feel is indefinable in words but is perfectly understood in a painting or sculpture. Through making dolls I've learned to express things I could never fully say and that has been very rewarding and therapeutic.

Who or what influences you? Inspires you?
I'm inspired by many things. Again, people are probably my greatest source of inspiration. The birth of my daughter brought on a huge change of style for my work. Previously I created very large size figural sculptures. I was single and living foot loose and fancy free at the time and my sculptures relayed that feeling of freedom. Since I've been married and had my daughter as any mother will understand your priorities change and I guess your world just gets a bit smaller and more focused. My work became smaller in size for sure. My daughter’s imagination, observations and dreams became a great source of inspiration for me. I also think the experience of motherhood itself brought about memories, good and bad of my own childhood and my main focus of creating has centered around the childhood experience since that time.
As well my beloved city of New Orleans is a plethora of inspiration for me. I love the people, culture, music and vibe of this city. There is a history here that is embedded in the city and the residents know, love and embrace that history and the culture it has inspired. The essence of this city is very dear to my heart and motivates me creatively.
As far as style people always attach names like Edward Gorey and Tim Burton to my work and there is no doubt I love these artists and have been inspired by their work.
Tell us a little about your dolls and your process for making them. Materials, preliminary sketches, inspiration, etc.
Currently I work solely in polymer clay. I used to work with papier mache and the paper clays and would love to get back to using some of those materials. The fact that there is no drying or waiting time with the polymer is probably the main reason this is my current choice of materials. I actually prefer the organic feel of paper and natural materials.
I do not sketch. I just start with a wad of clay and see where it takes me. Once in awhile I will have a preconceived idea of what I am going to create but mostly my pieces come into being as the are being made.
Do you have a favorite doll? It can be handmade by you, handmade by someone else, or even (gasp) mass production.
I couldn't begin to pick one doll as a favorite, mine or anyone else s. When I'm drawn to a piece its usually because it evokes an emotion or feeling that is pertinent in that moment or that time of my life so to pick an all time favorite would be impossible. Currently one of my favorite pieces is Lillian. Unlike most of my work I did have a plan to make a happy or at least contented doll, and when I was finished with her (after many squished, not so happy faces) and she was looking at me with that serene face I just felt a great sense of accomplishment and happiness. Basically I feel our work is an expression of our inner feelings and to know that Lillian’s sense of peace and contentedness are within me is just a really good feeling.
Besides making dolls, what do you do? Job, other creative pursuits, hobbies, etc.
I'm lucky enough to be able to say I get to create as a full time job and it is a full time job. One I love to be sure. I love music and dancing, when I get an evening out to go see a great funky band and shake my booty all night long it is like a spiritual retreat. I like to read and watch a good movie. I love spending time with my daughter and doing girlie stuff together.
What are some of your favorite: movies, books, websites, magazines, foods, tv shows? (Any or all!)
Moulin Rouge
The Alchemist
I'm not really a computer gal and only spend time on sites I have to in order to sell and promote my work
Shrimp Po-Boy
Dexter
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why?
Well, I think that's obvious:) I love exactly where I'm at and wouldn't live anywhere else.
Where do you see yourself in one year? Five years? Ten years?
I always hate the question. I can hardly think of what I will be doing tomorrow let alone next week or next year. I know this is a detriment and I'm told one should look and think ahead but for whatever reason my brain just does not work that way. I of course hope to still be creating and making a living doing so. I hope my daughter is doing exactly what she wants in life and I hope that I'll have given her the right tools to pull that off. I hope that my husband and I are growing old together and loving life.
Where can we find you on the internet? (blog, website, Etsy shop, eBay, et al.)
http://www.loopyboopy.etsy.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/loopy_boopy/
http://loopyboopy.blogspot.com/
Monday, October 26, 2009
Sunday, October 25, 2009
New Member Spotlight - Cindee Moyer

It's time for another new member spotlight and our member today is Cindee Moyer. Cindee has been concentrating her artistic skills on art dolls for about five years and we're glad she did because you can see that her cloth dolls are wonders of both wit and skilled workmanship. Take a minute to see more of Cindee's lovely work in her Etsy shop and on her website. Welcome to the ADO team Cindee!
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Saturday's Vintage Video!
Any Raggedy Ann fans out there? This clip is from 1947. I was expecting American voices?! please fill me in folks :O)
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The History of Russian Babushka Nesting Dolls
A matryoshka doll, also known as a Russian nested doll or a babushka doll, is a set of dolls of decreasing sizes placed one inside the other. "Matryoshka" (Матрёшка) is derived from the Russian female first name "Matryona", and "babushka", the Russian word for grandmother.Matryoshkas date from 1890, and are said to have been inspired by souvenir dolls from Japan. The concept of nested objects was familiar in Russia at that time, having been applied to carved wooden apples and Easter eggs.
The first Russian nested doll set was carved by Vasiliy Zvezdochkin from a design by Sergei Maliutin, who was a folk crafts painter in the Abramtsevo estate of the Russian industrialist and patron of arts Savva Mamontov. The doll set was painted by Maliutin himself. Maliutin's design was inspired by a set of Japanese wooden dolls representing Shichi-fuku-jin, the Seven Gods of Fortune. Maluitin's doll set consisted of eight dolls -- the outermost was a girl holding a rooster, six inner dolls were girls, the fifth doll was a boy, and the innermost was a baby.
A set of matryoshkas consists of a wooden figure which can be pulled apart to reveal another figure of the same sort inside. It has, in turn, another figure inside, and so on. The number of nested figures is usually five or more. The shape is mostly cylindrical, rounded at the top for the head and tapered towards the bottom, but little else; the dolls have no hands (except those that are painted). Traditionally the outer layer is a woman, dressed in a sarafan. Inside, it contains other figures that may be of both genders, usually ending in a baby that does not open. The artistry is in the painting of each doll, which can be extremely elaborate.
Matryoshka doll
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sunday, October 18, 2009
New Member Spotlight - Anna Zueva

Our new member in the spotlight this morning is Anna Zueva,a professional doll artist who lives in Perm city, Russia. Anna's dolls are so enchanting and whimsical, with such delightful characters, that I know you'll want to see more then the peek you'll get here. So for more of her art dolls; visit her Etsy shop, her blog, or her amazing website! Welcome to the ADO team Anna!
Saturday, October 17, 2009
SaTurDaY's WEird aND wONdERfUL....
~
At the beginning of October, 1.5 million people filled the streets of Berlin, Germany to watch a several day performance by France's Royal De Luxe Street Theatre Company titled "The Berlin Reunion". Part of the celebrations of the 20th Anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunion show featured two massive marionettes, The Big Giant, a deep-sea diver, and his neice The Little Giantess. The storyline of the performance has the two separated by a wall, thrown up by 'land and sea monsters'. The big giant has just returned from a long and difficult - but successful experdition to destroy the wall, and now the two are walking the streets of Berlin, seeking each other after many years apart. The photos tell the story....
(click on images to enlarge - except the first image won't enlarge!)




















































