Art Space

Ten years ago I installed an Ikea Digniet wire in our dining room to provide a place to “hang my collection of ephemera.” When we got the dining room painted a few years ago, it got taken down, the wall repaired, and the ephemera went back into the archive.

But I saved the wire, and today Lisa and I hung it back up, this time in our front hallway:

A white hallway with a wire strung across the wall at eye level. There are 5 pieces of art hung on the wire, front left to right: a black and white abstract drawing, a colourful monotype print, a print with three simple coloured bars overlaid with red type, a broadside with bold aubergine HE, with helium printed underneath in black, and a black poster printed with an overlapping alphabet in grey and pink.

From left to right, the pieces we’ve hung to start:

Meanwhile, around the corner at the bottom of the stairs, Lisa hung a framed version of my Furiously Curious print, using an inexpensive red frame from Ikea that complements it well:

On a white wall, at the bottom of the stairs, lit from the left, is a red-framed broadcast with the words "furiously" and "curious" printed, in lower case, in red, at the top and bottom, with the text "I WAS SO CURIOUS, NOT IN A GENTLE, PASSIVE WAY, BUT FURIOUSLY CURIOUS. IT DRIVES ME CRAZY IF WE JUST ACCEPT SOMEONE'S DOGMA." printed, all caps, in black, between, all on a bright yellow background.

And, while we were on an art-roll, Lisa suggested we retrieve a large painting from storage and use it to fill up a large empty space on our kitchen wall:

A large abstract painting, in blues, greens, and greys, hung on the white wall of a kitchen, with the fridge, covered in ephemera, to the right.

Behind all three of these hangings were slight eruptions of internal discomfort that I needed to quell.

I don’t like drilling holes into walls (it seems so permanent).

I don’t like that the fridge door can slam into the kitchen artwork.

That the front door opening can rustle the art-on-a-wire makes me nervous.

But what trumps those discomforts are the inarguable facts that they improve our living space significantly, and they allow us a place to see our own work, and those of our friends and familiars, out in the open.

(Lisa wrote a post—a much better one—about the same thing!)

Peter Rukavina

Comments

A bit late perhaps, as the drilling is done. We have rails mounted on the wall near the ceiling from which artworks hang on transparent wires. It means we can change the artworks and position at will without the need for additional drilling or nail hammering.

Submitted by Oliver B on

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Also late…and not from experience, but FWIW I had the idea that if the painting in the kitchen could be slightly higher on the wall, then you’d be able to attach a doorstop for the fridge door. You’d have find and/or paint your doorstop for it not to be an eyesore, I suppose, assuming the possibility.

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About This Blog

Photo of Peter RukavinaI am . I am a writer, letterpress printer, and a curious person.

To learn more about me, read my /nowlook at my bio, listen to audio I’ve posted, read presentations and speeches I’ve written, or get in touch (peter@rukavina.net is the quickest way). 

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