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    Silver Tray Artist

    Ultimate recycling: Artist turns silver trays into timeless sculptures — dents and all

    Nancy Wozny
    nancy wozny
    Aug 5, 2013 | 12:09 pm

    In the opening passage of Bruce Norris' Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning play Clybourne Park, which proved a season highlight at the Alley Theatre, Bev tries to pawn off her silver chafing dish to her maid. After she refuses, she tries to give it away to the maid's husband. Another no go.

    I hear your pain Bev.

    Imagine how I felt when the estate sale lady told me, "No one wants that stuff anymore," when looking at the pile of silver from my parent's home. She muttered something under her breath about my generation never learning to entertain. Over the five weeks I spent getting my childhood home emptied for its next owner, I came to think of that pile of silver as a collection of orphans.

    "Surely, you need a silver butter dish," I would tell my sisters, sounding exactly like Bev.

    "I believe that within the new object still lives the past. That nothing is lost, only given a new history."

    No one did, so slowly I began to send some of the choice pieces back to Houston at a time when I was purging my own home of unneeded stuff. I sent so many pieces back to Texas that the UPS guy and I were on first-name basis. For a while there, it seemed that only the UPS guy and myself remotely cared about my mom's old silver.

    Then I wandered into Jaydan Moore's studio at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, whose work is now on view as part of In Residence: Work by 2012 Resident Artists, through Sept. 29. He, too, had a pile of silver, along with strange and beautiful silver sculptures mounted on the wall. Trays merging with each other possessed an otherworldly feeling, yet not so unfamiliar. A cluster of forks fused together made for another curious sculpture. On the far wall, I found elegant prints made from the engraved silver patterns. Moore even prints the back of the tray, showing the scratches, kicks and dents. It's life as a tray is revealed in the grooves of its history.

    "It's like a final record of the object," says Moore. Finally, someone who understood my silver situation.

    Tarnish and texture

    Moore takes donated old silver, or what he has found at re-sale shops, and turns them into something else, like three silver trays fused to make one elongated wall sculpture. Something we know and understand becomes a object of rare beauty. Tarnish doesn't scare him either, it adds to the texture of the work.

    It's as if he gives the silver another chance to be in the world.

    "I like the idea of how we add memory and meaning to objects."

    Moore was one of five artists in residence at the Craft Museum, a program started in 2001 for mid-career and emerging clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood and mixed media artists. Artists get space, a stipend and a show in exchange for being in their studios about 24 hours a week when the museum is open. So it's perfectly OK to wander in and chat with them about their work. Although it's a tiny bit like working in a fishbowl, Moore enjoys the interaction.

    "It's good to discuss your work with the public," he says. "Since I have said the same speech over and over, I find that I really start listening to what I am saying."

    Moore met the metal so to speak while still in high school, when he took a pre-college class at California College of Arts, Oakland, where he went on to earn his BFA in jewelry and metal arts. He headed straight to the Craft Center after earning his MFAH/MA at University of Wisconsin, Madison. His work took a turn toward using recycled objects while in grad school. "While making trophies I learned the commemorative object history began with table service ware. It was this knowledge that drove me to begin making trophies out of found tableware."

    He's attracted to things like heirlooms that carry the history of its owner. "I like the idea of how we add memory and meaning to objects," says Moore, who mostly uses recycled silver as his media now.

    "I am motivated by how an object moves through the world, changing in meaning as it is passed down," writes Moore in his artist statement, which is exactly why I handed over one of my mom's silver trays. Moore inspected it closely, nodding his head with approval. He knew the make and the model well.

    Transformation

    Weeks later, I revisited Moore and found my mom's tray transformed into a plate ready for the printing process.

    Moore has enjoyed his time in Houston and is now in Richmond, Va., working as a Fountainhead Fellow. Before he left he called me to say my print was done. I gazed at my mother's platter, now on paper, its every bump and scratch recorded by ink and the delicacy of the paper. It's more beautiful than I could have ever imagined. Moore puts it poetically in his artist statement, "I believe that within the new object still lives the past. That nothing is lost, only given a new history."

    Somewhere, Bev would be smiling, and that estate sale lady, smirking.

    Jaydan Moore hits the metal on HoustonPBS

    Jaydan Moore in his Houston Center for Contemporary Craft studio.

    Jaydan Moore in his Houston Center for Contemporary Craft studio
    Photo by Mark Wozny
    Jaydan Moore in his Houston Center for Contemporary Craft studio.
    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Avatar: Fire and Ash returns to Pandora with big action and bold visuals

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 18, 2025 | 5:00 pm
    Oona Chaplin in Avatar: Fire and Ash
    Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios
    Oona Chaplin in Avatar: Fire and Ash.

    For a series whose first two films made over $5 billion combined worldwide, Avatar has a curious lack of widespread cultural impact. The films seem to exist in a sort of vacuum, popping up for their run in theaters and then almost as quickly disappearing from the larger movie landscape. The third of five planned movies, Avatar: Fire and Ash, is finally being released three years after its predecessor, Avatar: The Way of Water.

    The new film finds the main duo, human-turned-Na’vi Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his native Na’vi wife, Neytiri (Zoë Saldaña), still living with the water-loving Metkayina clan led by Ronal (Kate Winslet) and Tonowari (Cliff Curtis). While Jake and Neytiri still play a big part, the focus shifts significantly to their two surviving children, Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) and Tuk (Trinity Jo-Li Bliss), as well as two they’ve essentially adopted, Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) and Spider (Jack Champion).

    Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), who lives on in a fabricated Na’vi body, is still looking for revenge on Jake, and he finds help in the form of the Mangkwan Clan (aka the Ash People), led by Varang (Oona Chaplin). Quaritch’s access to human weapons and the Mangkwan’s desire for more power on the moon known as Pandora make them a nice match, and they team up to try to dominate the other tribes.

    Aside from the story, the main point of making the films for writer/director James Cameron is showing off his considerable technical filmmaking prowess, and that is on full display right from the start. The characters zoom around both the air and sea on various creatures with which they’ve bonded, providing Cameron and his team with plenty of opportunities to put the audience right there with them. Cameron’s preferred viewing method of 3D makes the experience even more immersive, even if the high frame rate he uses makes some scenes look too realistic for their own good.

    The story, as it has been in the first two films, is a mixed bag. Cameron and co-writers Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver start off well, having Jake, Neytiri, and their kids continue mourning the death of Neteyam (Jamie Flatters) in the previous film. The struggle for power provides an interesting setup, but Cameron and his team seem to drag out the conflict for much too long. This is the longest Avatar film yet, and you really start to feel it in the back half as the filmmakers add on a bunch of unnecessary elements.

    Worse than the elongated story, though, is the hackneyed dialogue that Cameron, Jaffa, and Silver have come up with. Almost every main character is forced to spout lines that diminish the importance of the events around them. The writers seemingly couldn’t resist trying to throw in jokes despite them clashing with the tone of the scenes in which they’re said. Combined with the somewhat goofy nature of the Na’vi themselves (not to mention talking whales), the eye-rolling words detract from any excitement or emotion the story builds up.

    A pre-movie behind-the-scenes short film shows how the actors act out every scene in performance capture suits, lending an authenticity to their performances. Still, some performers are better than others, with Saldaña, Worthington, and Lang standing out. It’s more than a little weird having Weaver play a 14-year-old girl, but it works relatively well. Those who actually get to show their real faces are collectively fine, but none of them elevate the film overall.

    There are undoubtedly some Avatar superfans for which Fire and Ash will move the larger story forward in significant ways. For anyone else, though, the film is a demonstration of both the good and bad sides of Cameron. As he’s proven for 40 years, his visuals are (almost) beyond reproach, but the lack of a story that sticks with you long after you’ve left the theater keeps the film from being truly memorable.

    ---

    Avatar: Fire and Ash opens in theaters on December 19.

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