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NOTE: Simply putting an artwork in your shopping cart does not mean it is reserved. The item is not yours until you place your order and pay for it. Another person may “scoop” your item if it sits in your shopping cart unattended.
Due to the fragility of these works, some are available for local pick-up only. More information is located in the details for each artwork.
Click on any image to see more
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Cary Weigand, Close your earthly eyes, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Wild rabbit., 2022
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Cary Weigand, The woman who sees, 2022
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Cary WeigandFigure with Dog in Winter, 2022
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Cary Weigand, you are my moon, my joy, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Baku and Lucy., 2022
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Cary Weigand, Sunrise, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Bo and Baku., 2022
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Cary WeigandThe Coming of Spring, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Angel of dog spirits, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Yellow Horse, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Alice and her horse Rose., 2022
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Cary WeigandI've come a long way, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Woman with 2 dogs on horse, 2022
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Cary Weigand, Woman on horse., 2022
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Cary Weigand, Under the night sky., 2022
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CARY WEIGAND
Working in clay, Cary Weigand sculpts quietly powerful imagery that reflects her holistic worldview. "I hope for my work to be about listening and trying to understand," says Weigand. "I strive for balance in my life by appreciating small things—my dog's whiskers, the sound of wind and shadows, the music in landscapes. I feel a deep sense of interconnectivity with nature and animals. We are part of a great whole and nothing is separate." Her work functions as a personal and public exploration of death, rebirth and transition.
Weigand sculpts her pieces from various weights of clay slab, curled, folded and modeled. “As I begin to build, volume and balance come first, then I direct my attention toward contour,“ she says. The figures originate from the torso and are built out in every direction at the same time. She likens her process to a “wet origami.” Joints are puzzled together with small shapes, moving into the hands and face, building up the surface as details are smoothed out.
Born and raised in Hawai'i, Weigand earned both her BFA and MFA from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa. In 2006 she received a grant award from The George Sugarman Foundation for sculpture. Her work has been published in Ceramics Technical, and she was recognized as an Emerging Artist by Ceramics Monthly in 2011. Weigand now lives and works in southern Oregon.