Showing posts with label Tiki Tom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiki Tom. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2013

SunSentinel: Manatee students turn trash into teasure at BBAD


Artist Tiki Tom Bazinet, with the garbage can, teaches children how to clean up the beach and use found objects as art during a recent field trip. (submitted photo, FPG / December 27, 2013)


Traffic was backed up along Industrial Avenue on a recent Saturday as students and parents from Manatee Elementary School west of Lake Worth filed in to the Boynton Beach Arts District after a morning beachcombing for trash to recycle into eco-art.
Jennifer Robertson, kindergarten through fifth grade Discovery Lab teacher at Manatee was inspired to bring her class to the arts district after reading an article about environmental artist "Tiki Tom" Bazinet's "Trash to Treasures" exhibit last month.
Bazinet uses found objects such as hubcaps, sea glass, shells and driftwood to create eco-conscious environmental sculptures.
Along with co-teacher Jhanique Green, Robertson contacted Rolando Chang Barrero of ActivistArtistA Gallery and together they created a hands-on learning program, recycling beach trash into works of art.
"Rolando is wonderful," Robertson said. "He went above and beyond to create an opportunity for these kids to learn about real-life applications of recycling, sustaining the environment and creating art at the same time."
"Bringing the kids to experience art first hand provides an opportunity and a different conversation than I could have in the classroom."
"It's a chance for them to be inspired, learn about art and see real working artists in their studios, such as jewelry artist Renee Kemp, graffiti artist, Joey Cruz (aka Seez), and Stephanie Lee, who uses vinyl records to create new handbags."
"Tiki Tom and other artists see the potential in things and enable the kids to see these objects with a new perspective," Robertson said. "Where we might throw things in the trash, Tom sees art."
Robertson and Green divided the students into groups and local artists including Michael Kupillas, Dianett Doyle and Jackee Swinson gave demonstrations and worked with the children.
Cruz guided students' hands on the spray gun while creating graffiti art and quickly created signed caricatures of the students.
Bazinet used a glue gun to assist the students apply their found objects to a wooden manatee sculpture he created.
Combs, bottle caps, coral and almond seeds from the rain forest adorned the sculpture.
Lee, an upcycle artist, was explaining what vinyl records were and encouraging the students to be creative.
"Just use your imagination and you can make anything," she said.
Debbie Elliot, a teacher at Palm Springs Middle School accompanied her two children, Danielle, 9 and Jessica, 14, and Krista Martinelli, a writer, was there with her two children, Stella, 8, and Paul, 6.
"This is a great hands-on experience for the kids," Martinelli said. "And the whole arts district is very cool."
Student Danielle Elliot was excited to work with "Tiki Tom" in decorating the manatee and Stella Martinelli, who found turtle eggs on the beach and wants to be a filmmaker, said her favorite part was drawing Tiki Tom's sunbursts, made from recycled hubcaps, buttons and toothbrushes, in her notebook.
All the students made notebooks in which to draw and write down their inspirations.
Barrero, who put his heart and soul into his role as host said, "I was impressed by the level of participation from both parents and students. It was a joy watching the kids' excitement on the beach and in the tours of the artists' studios."
"Never before has the art district been so buzzing with the laughter and joy that only children can bring," he said.
The Boynton Beach Arts District is at 422 W. Industrial Ave. Call 786-521-1199 or emailRolandoBarrero@Mac.com.
Upcoming exhibits and events include: Sensibilities: The Photography of Ali Miranda and Cheryl Maeder and the Black and White Party at Saturday. The party is free and open to everyone.
The ArtPalmBeach kick-off celebration will be at BBAD from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. Jan. 24. To register for the bus tour from the Palm Beach Convention Center, visit artalfrescoboyntonbeach or eventbrite.com/e/art-al-fresco-boynton-beach-arts-district-tickets-9459671131.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Palm Beach Post Today: Lake Worth kids to convert beach trash into treasures



Lake Worth kids to convert beach trash into treasures

By Ana M. Valdes Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
   Beach trash will become artistic treasure for dozens of elementary students from Lake Worth today, as they make an art piece out of bottles, glass and other garbage they collect at Boynton Beach Oceanfront Park.
   The students, kindergarten through fifth graders at Manatee Elementary in Lake Worth, will gather at the beach at 10 a.m. under the direction of local artist “Tiki” Tom Bazinet.
   After cleaning the beach, they will head to the Boynton Beach Arts District on West Industrial Avenue, where after breaking into groups, they will create a piece of environmental art that 
will eventually be donated to their school.
   The kids will also see “Tiki’s” permanent public art project, “The Island of Tiki People,” and hear from a graffiti artist.
   Rolando Chang Barrero of ActivistArtistA and the organizer of the event said the idea is to get kids out of the classroom and learn about art and the importance of taking care of the environment.
   It’s the first time, Barrero added, that art district officials have gone off district property for an educational program, but he says it is well worth the children’s time.
   “They are going to go to the beach, find the objects just like ‘Tiki’ does and return to the art district, where they are going 
to compare to see if what they found is anywhere in (Tiki’s) work in the gallery,” Barrero said.
   Debby Coles-Dobay, public art manager for Boynton Beach, said the event highlights the importance of public art.
   Other schools are also choosing Boynton Beach to allow their children to learn about art in the outdoors. On Thursday, 45 fifth-graders and four teachers from Country Oak Elementary School in LaBelle will visit Boynton Beach to study kinetic art.
   “We love the idea that teachers are utilizing public art for outdoor classrooms,” Coles-Dobay said. avaldes@pbpost.com 
   Twitter: @AnaValdespbp



Friday, December 13, 2013

SunSentinel Today! Art and trash collide at Boynton event....




It's not every day you learn how to turn a hubcap into fine art.
On Saturday, students from Manatee Elementary in Lake Worth will come to Boynton Beach to learn how to turn trash into treasure, with a city beach clean-up and an art lesson using the junk they've collected.
Rolando Chang Barrero, head of the Boynton Beach Art District, said events like this are part of an effort to turn the arts district into an educational hub for emerging young artists, in this case, the younger the better.
"The kids are going to learn about art and recycling," he said. "All that stuff you find on the beach, you don't have to throw it away, you can recycle it into art."
Jennifer Robertson, teacher of the gifted at Manatee Elementary in Lake Worth. contacted Chang Barrero about bringing her students to show them how to think outside of the box.

"[This project] takes creativity to a whole other level," she said. "It's not typical art, it's vibrant and it speaks to the kid's imagination, teaching them to make ordinary into extraordinary."
This weekend, about 21 students and their families will pick up trash along the shores ofBoynton Beach Oceanfront Park, before heading down to the city's art district for an art lesson from a local environmental artist.
Tom Bazinet, who is also known as 'Tiki Tom,' has an exhibit in the Boynton Beach Art District. He creates tiki heads and other artwork from supplies he finds on the beach. He also weaves living plants into his work, making it sustainable.
"I've always been a beachcomber," he said. "And then I started incorporating the trash into my artwork — lighters, toothbrushes, anything I could find."
Bazinet collects seashells, hubcaps, lobster buoys, broken plates, dolls, oyster shells, fishing lines and even syringes and turns them into art, which sells anywhere from $50 to several thousand dollars.
He hopes that teaching a class this weekend will inspire future artist.
Travis McIntire, 7, a second-grader at Manatee Elementary, got a preview of Bazinet's exhibit on Wednesday.
His favorite piece is called "Welcome to the Beach," a skull and crossbones surrounded by syringes.
"It's really cool," McIntire said.
That piece was one of his mother's – Kathy McIntire's — favorite pieces too.
"[Bazinet's] able to get something so ugly like syringes and make it beautiful and still make a statement," she said.
Bazinet said the piece is to warn beach-goers that there are things lurking underneath the dunes that can be dangerous. In one beach clean-up, he found 90 syringes, he said.
Debby Coles-Dobay, the city's public art administrator, is happy to see that Boynton Beach's unique brand of art is bringing real issues to light.
"We want to engage the public," she said. "Overall we want public art projects that are a learning experience, whether for students or adults."
aanthony@sunsentinel.com or 561-243-6648 or @attiyya_sun
If you go: Beach clean-up at Boynton Beach Oceanfront Park at 6415 North Ocean Blvd., 9 to 10 a.m., followed immediately by an art lesson at 
Boynton Beach Art District 401 West Industrial Drive






Sunday, December 1, 2013

Palm Beach Post News: Artist finds beach litter, creates treasures.

TIKI TOM: One Man's Trash
His zany artwork – tikis, mosaics made from broken bottles, 
objects d’art – will be on exhibit at the 
ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 W. Industrial Ave. in Boynton Beach through Dec. 20.
Open by Appointment: 786-521-1199


Man transforms beach litter into works of art photo

TIKI TOM: One Man's Trash
His zany artwork – tikis, mosaics made from broken bottles, 
objects d’art – will be on exhibit at the 
ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 W. Industrial Ave. in Boynton Beach through Dec. 20.
Open by Appointment: 786-521-1199


Tom Bazinet at home in Lake Worth on Nov. 4, 2013 with one of his painted hubcaps and other art he 

Man transforms beach litter into works of art

Posted: 12:00 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 28, 2013

BY LINDA HAASE - SPECIAL TO THE PALM BEACH POST
MEET YOUR NEIGHBOR: Tom Bazinet, 53


Old hubcaps. Shattered bottles. Coconuts. Broken dolls. Shells. Newspaper. Discarded syringes.


Trash? Not to Tom Bazinet, who searches the beaches for litter that he transforms into treasured art. The 53-year-old Lake Worth resident not only helps keep the beaches clean, he nurtures his artistic spirit.
His zany artwork – tikis, mosaics made from broken bottles, objects d’art – will be on exhibit at the ActivistArtistA Gallery, 422 W. Industrial Ave. in Boynton Beach through Dec. 20.
The show, aptly called “One Man’s Trash,” is designed to be an arty, ecological wonderland. “Everywhere you look you will see things from the beach that have been made into art. It will be an ecological environment people can walk through. They’ll see there are uses for this stuff,” explains the Forest Hills High School grad.
“I like the fact that I have a different way to recycle. It makes me sad when I see all the trash on the beach and I get a lot of satisfaction when I take the trash away,” he says. “I found 100 syringes on the beach in one day. I used them to make a sun. The syringes became the rays.”
Even the former Marine’s “day job” is intertwined with his environmental art. He’s a tree trimmer and landscaper – and many of the discarded tree limbs and branches have been carved into ornamental tikis or totems.
Nothing ever goes to waste, he emphasizes: “I add plants to a lot of pieces. I love the way the plants become part of the art and it brings life back to the trunk.” (He carved a huge face in a decaying tree in front of a house at Third Avenue and Federal Highway in Lake Worth)
Bazinet, who was born at Good Samaritan Hospital in West Palm Beach, has even decorated his van with his artwork (it definitely draws attention from others, he admits).
He has always been passionate about art. “When was a kid I made macramé plant hangers. In high school I made jewelry from sea shells. I always wanted to be an artist,” he says.
These days, he’s branched out – even using dolls he finds washed up on the beach. “The first one I found, I put a plant in its head. Ever since I sold that piece, I have been making artwork with dolls. Some people think they are scary, but I sell a lot of them,” he says.
He’s discovered dive watches, soda bottle caps, doll legs – and other litter - on his hunts.
The one thing he’d like to find?
“A duffel bag full of money,” he quips.


Wednesday, November 6, 2013

SunSentinel Today! Great article by Jan Engoren!


Tiki Tom's outsider art comes inside


by Jan Engoren, SunSentinel

Tom Bazinet, aka Tiki Tom, will showcase his artwork made from objects he found while beachcombing will be on display at the ActivistArtistA Gallery in Boynton Beach starting Friday. (submitted photo, FPG / November 5, 2013)

ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, Florida 33426
Friday, November 8, 2013 | 7 PM


November 6, 2013

Outsider art comes inside with the opening of Tom Bazinet's "One Man's Trash: The Work of Tiki Tom" at 7 p.m. Friday at Rolando Chang Barrero's ActivistArtistA Gallery in the Boynton Beach Arts District.
On display through Dec. 20, Bazinet, 53, transforms the gallery into an eco-conscience environment showcasing found objects of old hubcaps, coconuts, broken dolls, used toothbrushes, combs and plastic waste from years of beachcombing.
The Florida native and tree cutter known as Tiki Tom has been beachcombing for more than 40 years, originally at Phipps Ocean Park Beach in Lake Worth, until parking rates increased. Bazinet now focuses on cleaning up Boynton Beach.
"Boynton Beach has been good to me," he said. "I started with a 5-gallon bucket," he said, and was soon bringing a 30-gallon bin and filling it up with debris every time – old ship ropes, plastic lids, lighters, toothbrushes and old buoys.
He sports a gold earring, a found object from beachcombing 20 years ago that he has worn ever since.
Faces of the sun created from old hubcaps adorn his purple van and his profession as a tree cutter allows him to utilize his raw materials for ornamental tikis made from recycled materials, 10 of which were commissioned as an island of tikis by the city of Boynton Beachfor the Mangrove Walk on Northeast Fourth Avenue across from St. Mark Catholic Church.
Debby Coles-Dobay, the city's public art administrator who commissioned Bazinet's installation for the city, said, "Tiki Tom transforms his passion for the environment into his art."
"He is dedicated to collecting trash from the waterways and beaches, and using it to perfect his techniques. He creates whimsical sculptural characters that engage the community to care for the environment," she said.
Many of his sculptures use mannequins, sea grass and shells with plants growing out of them to create living sculptures. He creates mosaics from found colored beach glass.
The self-described eccentric, with his long hair, earing and tattoos, said, "I'm grateful to Boynton Beach for supporting the arts district. It's becoming an interesting place and I give the city credit for that."
Barrero said, "Tiki Tom makes cleaning up the beach and creating art a synchronism. He transforms the profane to the sublime, bringing his outsider art indoors to create an environment for contemplation, introspection and marvel. "
The Boynton Beach Arts District is at 422 W. Industrial Ave. Call 786-521-1199 or emailRolandoBarrero@Mac.com.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Upcoming Exhibition: Eco-Sensitive Beachcomber Artist Turns Profane into Sublime

Art made from Medical Waste dumpped on our shores
"Art made from glass, trash, and other non-organic waste (medical waste inclusive) may raise questions about how we care for our shores. 
One Man's Trash which will open on November 8th at 7 PM at ActivistArtistA Gallery is a utopian evnvironment created by Thomas Bazinet, a/k/a "Tiki Tom" who has made cleaning up the beach and making art some what of a synchronism. Taking the profane to the sublime the folk artist brings his outsider art in doors to create an environment for comtemplation, introspection and marvel. "
-Rolando Chang Barrero, Curator 

One Man's Trash: The Work of TIKI TOM
at
ActivistArtistA Gallery
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, FL 33426
786-521-1199

November 8th thru December 201th, 2013

 Below are some of the elements that will become 
beachcomber artist, Tiki Tom's "One Man's Trash" Environment.


















Wednesday, February 15, 2012

KeroWACKED: Welcomes Tiki Tom


Tiki Tom
Photo Courtesy of Rolando Barrero

presents an installation of creations by  
TIKI Tom 
during
"KeroWACKED: Homage to Jack"
February 26th, 2012
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, FL 33426

As promised ActivistArtistA will spotlight a different artist each day until the event.

This is Sneak Preview # 13

Outsider! Art Brut! Call it what you may, but the art of Tiki Tom is refreshing and uplifting!
Mosaic artist Tiki Tom exemplifies an aesthetic few dare to 






also,

Lea Vendetta and fellow artist, Rolando Chang Barrero, have organized 
Opening Reception
January 26 to February 17

Contact Rolando Barrero, Dir, at 786-521-1199

See  More Events Below

ActivistArtistA Collection
and others.

Visit our friends:

Founded and Directed by Andrea Michelle Ible

Read about The District


ActivistArtistA presents...
Love in the Afternoon: Art Walk
Saturday, Feb. 11, 2012
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, FL 33426