Joel's work can be found in public, private and government collections. He has exhibited extensively across the United States, and in 2014 was handpicked from over a thousand artists by the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, to participate in its state-of-the-art Discovering American Art Now exhibition. Believing that art should amaze and express our experience here on Earth, Joel turns everyday objects and things that would be relics of the past into the art of today, creating a wow factor with a sense of the somewhat familiar, while being all brand new.
From geology to art
Joel didn’t start out to be an artist, “I had first gone to college to be a geologist. This came from working on a drill rig, specifically doing core sampling all over the state of Montana. We were studying the different layers of soil that had been moved in the last ice age. When I was in my sophomore year of college, (I was almost 40 by this time), the only class available to me to fill out my schedule was an art class.
And while they teach you a lot of things in school, they never teach you how to find fulfilment in your life. I’d been searching, with so many jobs, trying to find a way to fulfil my curiosity and creativity. The art class was like a giant gong in my head and I changed majors right away. I threw myself into art completely and I have never been disappointed.”
Joel’s combination of skills led to a role growing crystals. “A crystal growing company was looking for someone with a diverse range of skills and they hired an artist to come in and work there. I was recruited as a ‘visual engineer’ and I started to learn all about the processes for making crystals grow, which was amazing.”
Work and art began to merge, with Joel creating intricate hanging artworks while working as a crystal grower. Using materials including yarn (sometimes up to four miles of yarn per piece), steel wire, wine corks, bottles, acrylic sheeting, copper and wood, his works are hand-forged and hand tied as he builds shapes and sculpts with lines to create a range of forms.
“I like the process of finding things and transforming them into something,” he explains. “You can transform the ordinary into something elegant, which is a fun challenge.”
Joel’s works are eclectic, from room-sized gallery installations to hanging fibre sculptures and acrylic wall art.
.jpg?width=468&height=625&name=Joel%20S.%20Allen%20(3).jpg)
.jpg?width=477&height=596&name=Joel%20S.%20Allen%20(4).jpg)
