Yee haw! Our blog has moved!

that we had to move our blog!

The title of the post that was on this page was:

Screaming Color

If you copy the post title you should be able to search on our new site and find the same post!

 Take the leap and check out our new:

The content that was on the original post is below (minus the images).
Sorry, but our blog grew too big for our britches and we had to make some changes. BUT, you can see all of the images on the new site: creativejuiceblog.com

Color is certainly an ingredient which adds spark or more like lights the spark to creativity and innovation. When it comes to space and the use of color we definitely know a thing or two for adding the shaazam to the every day. From the bright red wall when you first get off the elevator to the little sparks of light in every twist and turn of the Ranch, we breathe Meet Create Inspire! Well today I want to introduce you to an artist that makes the hairs stand on end and screams color!

Balloon sculptures by artist Jason Hackenwerth!

Hackenwerth has constructed four multiple large-scale, original balloon sculptures on-site. Using 1000s of balloons and a technique developed after years of working as a children’s entertainer, Hackenwerth creates balloon animals as works of art. His invented creatures are inspired by the look of micro-organisms and the structural engineering of natural forms like coral reefs. Although all of his animals are imagined, Hackenwerth’s sculptures resemble living animals in that they experience an observable life cycle. Constructed and brought to life on-site by the artist, over time each sculpture will slowly age as it wilts, droops, and finally, expires. Hackenwerth views the temporal nature of his work not as a negative side effect of the material he uses, but as an essential truth that mirrors the natural life process of all living things.

Jason brings all this color to the streets …..A grizzly bear sized monster made of balloons, the Megamite claims to be an anemone, a creature from the deepest reaches of your id.

To build the creature, Hackenwerth uses hundreds of skinny, brightly colored balloons that he twists together with fantastic mathematical symmetry. Protruding from the Megamite’s belly are dozens of spear-like balloons that fire off like missiles.

Follow Jason’s blog here.