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Showing posts with label Wiregrass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wiregrass. Show all posts

Friday, August 19, 2016

The Troy Benches - Les Bancs de Troy.


The Wiregrass Mosaic Project consists of covering several sets of concrete table and benches located on the Dothan Campus with individual mosaics created bya a great number of individuals. 

Over 500 people each created a small mosaic on a piece of fiberglass mesh.

Now I am setting these mosaics on top of the benches.

Later on this summer  I will fill the space between tiles with a coloured grout.


Hopefully we will have a grand magnificent opening in the early fall !
 




 

This project is being realized in partnersip with the Troy University Library and the Wiregrass Museum of Art


Le Projet de Mosaïques du Wiregrass consiste a recouvrir plusieurs ensembles de tables et bancs en béton avec de petites mosaïques individuelles. .

Plus de 500 personnes ont chacune réalisé une petite mosaïques sur un morceau de toile de verre. 

Sur cette vidéo j'installe les mosaiques sur les bancs. 



 
Je suis désolé, la première partie de la vidéo est en Anglais, j'ai ajoute des sous-titres. 

Plus tard cet été je remplirais les joints avec un mortier de remplissage. J’espère avoir une inauguration au début de l'automne. 

Ce projet est réalise en partenariat avec la bibliothèque de la Troy University a Dothan, Alabama, et le Wiregrass Museum of Art. 



I am a French mosaic artist based in Alabama. My Art is about Inspiring people, I am presently working on these huge portraits of the eyes of Yezidi Refugees. If you are interested by my work, please contact me by phone at (334) 798 1639 or by email at frederic.lecut@mosaicblues.com
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Je suis un Artiste Mosaïste installe en Alabama. Mon Art est a propos de l'Inspiration. Présentement, je travaille a ces grands portraits des Yeux de réfugiés Yézidis
Si mon travail vous intéresse vous pouvez me contacter par téléphone au 334 798 1639 (aux Etats Unis), ou par email a frederic.lecut@mosaicblues.com
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Sunday, November 1, 2015

Wiregrass Mosaic Project - Troy University - Part II


During our 2 October sessions we produced enough tiles to cover our  rectangular table and benches. 




During our next November 12 session we will try to produce enough pieces to cover the round tables. 

We should get help from Students from 2 Dothan High Schools to realize this stage of the project.



Because there will be much more small pieces to produce for these round tables, I decided to simplify the original designs to let people be more creative. 

Some pattern will simply be empty shape, the only important thing being to not build anything outside of the limits of the pattern...

Good ! 


The accuracy or the individual beauty of the piece itself is not extremely important. What is very important is to NOT glue any material outside of the limits of the individual pattern, which would oblige me to cut out the excessive material when I glue the pieces onto the table itself. 

Not so Good !

Early in 2016 we will build the pieces we need to cover the circular benches. Our plan is to have completed the project in the Spring



This is a first project, I would like to extend it more widely in the future and reach out to many participants of our Wiregrass community. 



The Principle we are following here is that each participants create one individual part of the project. each person contributes a stone to the Church, and it is the quilting together of all these individual pieces that brings a beautiful and harmonious result.

We will need help from many people with various areas of expertise. If you would like learn more about this Project, and perhaps contribute to it, please contact :

  • Donna Miller by email at dmiller@troy.edu or by phone at (334) 983 6556 ext 1321, or

 

I am a modern mosaic artist with a deep admiration for ancient Greek, Roman and Byzantine Arts. You can see my own mosaics on my site at mosaicblues.
 




If you are interested by my work or would like to drop me a line please contact me by email at frederic.lecut@gmail.com or by phone at (334) 798 1639. 



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Friday, March 14, 2014

Of Mosaics, Martial Arts and Meditation




Artist Frederic Lecut


Creating Communion

By Amanda Smith • Photography by Brian W. McDonald


Mosaics date back to ancient times, the Greeks elevating their creation to an art form. Tiny stones in different hues merge to construct elaborate works. By themselves, the bits of stone are unremarkable, yet when interwoven into complex patterns and pictures, the end result is a masterpiece. This is not unlike the events in a human life. Taken in and of itself, each experience can seem mundane and ordinary, but combine them, and the adult who emerges can be a complex being able to accomplish remarkable things. Such is the case with Frederic Lecut.

Lecut, who currently lives in Headland, Alabama, was born and raised in the Picardy region of northern France—a treasure trove of old-fashioned towns and quiet resorts, known for its great cathedrals, abbeys and medieval might. As a child, Lecut enjoyed archaeology and visiting historical sites in and near his hometown, many of which were decorated by mosaics. His parents traveled with him in tow, showing him landmarks such as Roman ruins in which gorgeous mosaics cover the floors and walls of the ancient elite. Thus, a seed was planted.

Time moved on, and as a young man, Lecut struggled with depression. "I know what this is," he says. "You are in a deep, black hole with no interest in anything. Things you enjoyed before— fishing, boating—have no interest to you now." During this period, Lecut had a job teaching martial arts in the local village. He would force himself to get out of bed in order to lead his classes. Once there, he discovered something: after having immersed himself in teaching, his depression would dissipate. He believes the combination of concentration and inward meditation the discipline requires was partly responsible. Another important element was that, in teaching, he felt he was giving himself to his students. You cannot be unhappy when you help others, Lecut says. 





This act of giving awoke within him a passion for martial arts which has never dimmed. Today, he teaches a variety of martial arts classes and writes about the subject at www.underthemoonshadow. blogspot.com. His background in this ancient discipline laid another piece into the mosaic of his life. It honed an ability to focus for long periods of time, a skill he would later use when formulating works of art.

Lecut studied nuclear and mechanical engineering, which eventually led to an international career that brought him to South Alabama in the 1980s. Lecut's background in engineering fostered a love for building and creating things, and it appealed to his meticulous nature.



    Though his work allowed him to live well and support his children, Lecut was aware of a growing unhappiness. His job was stressful, and the pressure was constant. When he developed a stomach ulcer, he knew it was time for a change. His children were grown and on their own. In 2000, he decided to quit his job and pursue his true love, teaching martial arts.


    Three years later, during a visit to France, his mother introduced him to Jean Pierre Soalhat, an internationally recognized mosaic artist based in a little Provence village called Caseneuve. Lecut was enthralled. He was immediately reminded of the venerable mosaics he had loved as a child, and another piece of his life's mosaic clicked into place. He apprenticed with Soalhat, then acquired some tools and returned home to Headland, where he began making mosaics of his own.



       It's a delicate, detailed and painstaking process. Lecut envisions a design, first seeing a hint of an image in his head. Little by little, it develops into something he can sketch. Once he has it on paper, he enlarges and laminates the blueprint. Then, he begins cutting stones and places them, in reverse, on his pattern. He works in sections, laying stones, securing them and letting them dry. By the time he has finished a medium-size mosaic, he has invested more than 50 hours into the piece.


        When working on a mosaic, he often becomes completely absorbed. He'll forget to eat or sleep. "It's a total engagement of mind and body," he remarks. It is the same sense of concentration he feels when doing martial arts. After the completed project has dried for several days, Lecut faces the moment of truth. He carefully flips the design and sees it from the front for the first time. "It's," he struggles for words, then shrugs and smiles, "a magical moment."

        The process is a spiritual one for Lecut. He uses tools like those employed thousands of years ago by makers of mosaics, and feels as if he's participating in an ancient ritual that connects him to those artisans. He compares it to entering a cathedral where people have worshiped for centuries. "You cannot but feel awe—there is something sacred there," he says.




    This is different from the feeling he has when seeing breathtaking new architecture in locales he's traveled, like Dubai and New York. As a lover of architecture, Lecut is astounded by the structures in these destinations, but it is not the same experience as going to a place, even a simple place, where others have gone for centuries for the same purpose. "All these people who have been here before you, feeling as you feel now—this is what ritual is about. It puts you in communion with other people," he affirms. This extraordinary communion is reflected in Lecut's work. It draws the viewer into that solidarity and provides a glimpse into the past.





This article was published in the March April 2014 issue of Wiregrass Living Magazine.