Wolverine Line – Passing Infrastructure
Wolverine Line – Passing Infrastructure
“Any way I can express myself, I’ll do that.”
Justine Melville enjoys the process of making: the experimentation, the trying out new ideas, the techniques. Learning something new.
And having something to show for it is a great side benefit.
“Putting the energy into my work – dying fabric, taking the color out, ice dying – there’s a lot to it,” she says. “The process is a good focus for me. It helps calm me. And I really enjoy the product I get.”
It’s easy to get lost in the work. That’s the fun part.
“We’re so busy these days and expected to pay attention to so much that it doesn’t matter. It’s nice to zone out,” Justine says.
As a fabric artist, Justine has found a new way to express herself creatively. She discovered dying fabric after a boyfriend taught her how to screen print.
All it took was trying to tie dye with a mixed berry print.
“Ever since, I’ve been kind of addicted.”
Justine has always been creative, using many media to express herself. She’s tried printmaking and dabbles in photography.
“Any way I can express myself, I’ll do that,” she says. “I felt like, for the longest time, I was a little lost with my creativity. I’ve always bounced around.”
Now that she’s settled on fabric, Justine has found success participating in exhibits, from booth shows to warehouse shows to gallery shows. She has an Etsy store and promotes her work on social media.
The creative community in Jackson has also helped, and Justine has become increasingly involved with other artists in town. She traces much of that collaboration to The Singularity, which introduced her to other open-minded creative types.
“It showed me what can really happen in this town,” Justine says. “We’re very supportive of each other, which is the biggest thing in my eyes.”
She thinks Jackson could better support artistic pursuits and be more open-minded about the kinds of art that are possible in town. She also thinks Jackson could use more community-oriented spaces for artists to work on projects and collaborate.
As someone who has lived in Chicago and returned, Justine doesn’t understand pessimism about her hometown.
“Some people think this town is a black hole. I don’t see that. I think they’re the black hole,” she says. “There’s a lot of people who get out and come back and still enjoy it. This is a nice place to call home.”
Buy the Artists In Jackson book | Mercurial Threads
“It’s a good outlet for depression. I’ve always been able to show myself something solid and tell myself, ‘You’re not a bad person. Look at what you can do.’”
It’s funny how life lessons can go awry – like the summer that David Flack’s parents had him work in the shop at the family business, SALCO Engineering.
They figured two summers on the shop floor would make David hit the books and not want to come back.
“The exact opposite happened,” David says. “I fell in love with getting dirty.”
And while the guys on the floor would never call themselves “artists,” David absorbed their craftsmanship and resourcefulness. They taught him how to weld. Now he makes metal objects big and small, and he traces that back to growing up in the shop.
“It’s captivated me since I was a little kid,” he says. “I’d watch these monsters eat metal and spit out these amazing things.”
Amazing things. That’s what he wanted to do. David wanted to be around creation.
After graduating from Albion College in 2009, David started working with his father at SALCO, updating the technology at the shop and taking on design work and estimates.
Then he hooked up with a collaborator, Kyle Huntoon, and started building art pieces- Kyle took on the woodworking, and David handled the steel. They put their reclaimed art in festivals and art shows, traveled the country, and made a good business.
“Kyle opened my eyes to the idea of being a reclaimed artist – of taking junk and bringing it back to life,” David says.
While the pair have amicably parted ways, David took that spirit of junk-to-art and developed his own style. Grand River Brewery had him make their tap handles, and the City of Jackson commissioned him to make bike racks around downtown.
David enjoys making furniture, too, but he’d like to try more large-scale sculptural work in the future.
“I like driving down the street and being able to say, ‘I made that,’” he says.
It’s the making David enjoys, coming from a part of his Midwestern upbringing. He stays on with the family business to preserve the craftsman culture.
“It’s in the Midwest, it’s in our blood,” David says. “We come from this line of people who pull themselves up. After all the auto industry changes, we still have hopes and dreams, and all the knowledge and work ethic is still there.”
Steel is great because it’s a very forgiving material but with limitations. That’s where David finds creativity comes in handy – taking something with an inherent shape gives you pre-defined parameters. The parts of the whole shape his artistic pieces.
“You have to let it come together as organically as possible,” David says.
Much like Jackson. David has seen the artistic community come into its own in recent years, and he’s happy to see it. Enough of the low expectations and lack of pride.
“It’s nice to be a part of the scene where people are going for it and not sitting on their hands,” David says. “I want to try to motivate this city to make it a better place.”
“I want to be visible.”
Buy the Artists In Jackson book | dFlack Craftwork
When we buy a physical book, we can do with it what we want – cut up the pages, burn it for warmth, give it to friends, and so on. Because the contract of ownership between reader and object is implicit, not dependent on any third party, the physical book also becomes a true souvenir of the reading experience.
Riding the train from Chicago to Michigan, Pt. 1.
Not quite what Amtrak shows off on their promo website.
I’m super proud of how my Artists In Jackson book turned out. It’s 100+ gorgeous pages of artist profiles and portraits.
As a part of the package, I also made an eBook version. I created it as a more portable companion piece to the book, and it’s available as a PDF and Apple iBook now on the Artists In Jackson website.
I created both the PDF and iBook using Apple iBooks Author. The template format made it super easy to transfer the photos and text from an InDesign document. Plop photos in the picture spots, copy and paste the text, and work on a few formatting things like pull quotes and the table of contents, and you have an eBook. All pretty easy, as long as you’re okay giving up some formatting control.
Just export the iBook as a PDF and you have a format that anyone can enjoy. It really makes it a one-and-done online publishing option.
The book is still the objectified end-point of the portrait project. It’s the artifact, the thing that (hopefully) will last for decades. It’s also, at $89, a bit of a luxury item. Not everyone can afford almost $100 for a book, and I recognize that. The book is still what you should buy, but I get the affordability issue.
So the eBook is only $9. Much more affordable, and priced so just about anyone can read the profiles and view the photos on the go.
Buy the eBook and support the project!
Thanks to Jacksonopolis for the feature and Q&A.
A deeper dive into the how and why of my Artists In Jackson project.
Today I’m releasing my portrait project Artists In Jackson to the world. Since June, I’ve interviewed and photographed 15 Jackson-based artists about their talent, their challenges, and their hometown. The final product is a beautiful, 100+ page book featuring stories and portraits from the artists.
You can learn about the project at artistsinjackson.com. And the book makes a great holiday gift!
Thank you so much to the artists who participated. Through painting, or photography, or metalworking, or tattoos, they’re making my hometown of Jackson, Michigan, a more beautiful place. Support them!
And thanks to all of you who have supported and shared this project.
For the past five or six months, I’ve spent a lot of time getting to know the artists, creatives, and makers in Jackson, Michigan, as a part of my Artists In Jackson project.
The culmination of the project, I always figured, would be a book. Photos and profiles of the artists, an explanation of the project, and a beautiful artifact of all the work I’ve done.
I love photo books. I’ve become a bit of a collector in the past year or so. That, and (as @alesserphotographer advocates) paper is what you keep for 100 years and give to your grandchildren.
So the Artists In Jackson book is now available for sale. I couldn’t be more proud of how it turned out.
This first run of copies (about 25) are going to get some special love and attention from me before they ship out. After that, I’m doing a buy-on-demand system from Blurb, the book publisher.
Also, the project’s artist profiles are now live on the website, along with a selection of photos from each artist’s portrait shoot.
It feels mighty good to have this project out the door and into the world. I’ve received lots of great feedback from family and friends, and lots of support from the community. Thanks to everyone for their time and attention.
I made something. It shipped. And away we go.
It’s been a pretty great October here in Michigan. And just before it turned pitch black on my morning commute, I grabbed some foggy forest shots as the leaves were turning.
Consider it a goodbye to the leaves for seven months or so.
I’m now adding more photos to my Society6 store. If you’re interested in purchasing a print of one of my photos, let me know and I’ll add it to the store.
Use this link through November 8 to get free shipping and $5 off any item.
A fallen angel in His lair
In midst of sinners kneeling down before his clout
Friggin’ love Ghost.
Have a great All Hallow’s Eve, everyone.
Her perfume smells like burning leaves.
Every day is Halloween.
Miss you Pete.
Happy Halloween!
Nothing like shopping for the perfect pumpkin at the local farm.
Autumn in Michigan is pretty great. And though my mood takes a turn for the worse because of the creeping darkness, I’m really trying to embrace this fall. It helps that the weather has been so great all October.
So let’s do it. Let’s do the Halloween thing and the pumpkins and the cider (lots of cider, what with six orchards within 20 minutes of my house). Let’s beat back the oncoming winter blues with some autumnal spirit.
Here they are: the 15 featured creatives in my Artists In Jackson portrait project.
They are 15 people that are making my hometown of Jackson, Michigan, a more beautiful place to live. And so generous with their time and attention – I can’t thank them enough for participating in this project.