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Wednesday, December 19, 2012
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Art after life

Artist Dan Ortega gets creative with cremation

By Athena Davis

In his Hillcrest studio, Daniel R. Ortega is constructing an ossuary—otherwise known as a resting place for the bones of the dead.

“This is going to be my first time doing an ossuary, with a little window right here,” Ortega says, pointing to a two-inch dip on the lower edge of a canvas he’s sculpting that, indeed, is filled with tiny bones. The bones in Ortega’s ossuary are generic animal bones, but the sculpted canvas they’re resting in is partly composed of the ashes of Ortega’s deceased cat, Dillion.

Dillion’s photograph hangs on the studio’s wall in fluffy black resplendence. Although he passed away in November 2007, Ortega’s current art project is intended to celebrate the beloved cat’s life. As a true pet lover, Ortega understands the emotion that can accompany the death of a pet. As an artist, he hopes to provide grieving pet owners with a creative means of remembrance. While Ortega proudly notes that Dillion’s is “the first PetStone in the family,” PetStone—the official title for Ortega’s brand of cremation artwork—has been helping other pet owners cope for nearly a decade.

Standing over a still-wet, 18-by-20-inch canvas covered in what appears to be clay, Ortega explains how the process works: “I’ve sculpted my cat’s ashes here, mixed with the medium that I work in, in organic powders. It takes about two or three days to dry. Then I put it on my easel over here, I gesso it and then I take paints on a palette and I start painting it.”

For those of us who somberly flush our goldfish and faint at the sight of blood, Ortega’s methods may seem a bit morbid. But the artist admits that he has always been fascinated with the afterlife. For him, working with animal ashes (or “cremains”) came naturally.

A Los Angeles native, Ortega grew up with an eye for art. He experimented with every medium he could get his hands on, from junior high school all the way through college, where he attended L.A.’s Otis College of Art and Design. “But I didn’t have this idea” to work with ashes, he says, until he began working at a mortuary in Glendale.

“I thought, because I was already into art—I was taking photography, architecture, everything—that it would be so cool, like the Egyptians, to use cremated ashes in an art form, you know? And other cultures use cremated ashes in different ceremonies and would build beautiful statues, not necessarily out of the ashes, but it was part of the creative end of burial. And I thought, Someday I’m going to experiment with organic material and see if I can sculpt it.”

Now retired, Ortega spent 13 years as a professional draftsman before he was able to focus completely on his art. After much trial and error, PetStone emerged in 2001 in conjunction with another endeavor, called TeraStone.
“Originally,” Ortega says, “I wanted to do pottery, with the ashes in the pottery.”

Ortega did manage to form and fire several pots containing animal ashes, but the vessels proved too fragile to stay intact for long. But Ortega was still determined to create an alternative to the typical aftercare service—he wanted something inventive, attractive and, most importantly, durable.

Using his knowledge of materials, Ortega developed a mixture of organic, eco-friendly powders that he could easily wet and sculpt on canvas. As it dries, the earthy mix turns to a solid, stone-like material that is surprisingly lightweight. TeraStone, the medium that Ortega works with most frequently, contains volcanic ash that is simply replaced, in part, with animal ash to become PetStone. Thanks to a generous donation of animal ashes from an L.A. crematorium back in 2001, Ortega became familiar with the process. PetStones are now made to order from Ortega’s website (www.pet stone.net), which includes a list of colors, materials, highlights and finishes to choose from.

Customers “can send me anything from a thimble spoon to a pound. It just has to go on the right size canvas so it fits. I say, if you have an average-size dog, it would take a minimum this size canvas,” says Ortega, motioning animatedly at an imaginary canvas.

Ortega is not a large man, but his enthusiastic voice booms as he talks—and he talks a lot. His attitude is contagious. Far from being dark and macabre, Ortega’s work is full of color, texture and celebration. The canvases are brightly embellished with a variety of materials, including stained glass, jewels and sand. In one corner of his studio hangs a glittering TeraStone skull with compact discs for eyes. Ortega decorates the skull every year to remember his family on the Day of the Dead.

“I’m kind of a mystical junkie,” he says, as he flits from piece to piece, pointing out Chinese characters and arrows, pulling books full of ancient imagery out of a packed bookcase. Dillion’s piece, titled “Breakthrough,” was inspired by a double triangle symbol used for Viking divination.

To date, Ortega insists that all of his customers—and he’s had some as far away as Maine and Florida—have been totally satisfied. One woman, he says, had a perfect spot up high in her kitchen where her cat used to sleep. “I did a long, rectangular piece over the entryway from the dining room to the kitchen. And you can’t tell that it’s a pet cremation. Unless she actually tells you, it’s just a piece of art.”

While PetStone is not for everyone, Ortega is finding an increasingly open audience. His art is now on display at the San Diego Pet Memorial Park in Mira Mesa, and he will be submitting work for an “Ashes to Art” show held in September in Graton, Calif. (www.funeria.com). PetStone will also donate 30 percent of its proceeds to a local nonprofit that benefits animals.

At 7 p.m. Saturday, May 3, Ortega will show his work with other local artists at Che Café on the UCSD campus. Though the show will focus on Ortega’s TeraStone creations, Dillion just might make an appearance.   

Published: 04/29/2008

 

 

North Park artist turns cremated pets into art

By David Moye

June 6, 2006

San Diego--If you’ve got some cremated pet ashes lying around, there’s an artist in North Park who’s dying to put them to good use.

Roberto Ortega is the creator of “Ashwork Design Concepts”,” a medium that mixes pet “cremains”—or cremated remains—with stone, calcium, and fossilized earth to create one-of-a-kind black and white or color works of art.

Mr. Ortega says he was inspired to create his ashworks on November 2, 2000, after attending a Day Of The Dead celebration in Mexico.

At first, he held off launching the unique memorial art tributes because he worried people wouldn’t accept it.

However, the idea stuck with him until finally he called the local Humane Society to ask what they did with the unwanted animals that were euthanized.

As a result, Mr. Ortega was able to hook up with a truck driver for the Humane Society whose job was to take the remains to a Los Angeles crematorium. Once Ortega convinced the crematoriums owner he wanted to turn the ashes into sincere pet memorial tributes, he managed to get five pounds of generic dogs and cats cremains for experimentation.

Amazingly, Mr. Ortega had a doggone good idea. He now sells his “Cremation Art Work” for between $125.00 and $565.00 a pop and has completed at least forty of his memorial masterpieces.

Mr. Ortega has each pet owner fill out a biography on the deceased animal that he uses for inspiration. Sometimes he sculpts personal symbols into the art, “as long as they’re not too complex.”

However, he also has to use his imagination since once he gets the ashes, “a golden retriever and black Labrador cremains look the same.”

So far, Mr. Ortega’s ashworks have been limited to dogs and cats. That means no canaries, ferrets or other animals have been given his special treatment. Still, he’s willing to do--and looks forward to doing—a piece of art dedicated to farm or exotic animals.

He’s also willing to make pieces from human remains—if customers sign waivers for the finished piece.

In fact, he’s done AshStone pieces using the ashes of his niece and his father, but for now offers human cremains to be installed in a TeraStone Vault behind the custom artwork, rather than scattering them on the painting itself.

For more information on Ortega’s works, check out Spirit House Art

--------------------

David Moye is a contributer to Huffington Post and occasional iconoclastic art critic.

 

 

 
 
Telegraph News
 

Hang your doggie on the wall


By Toby Harnden in San Diego

Last Updated: 11:41pm GMT 25/12/2006

 

Forget pet cemeteries and taxidermy. A California artist has come up with the ultimate tribute to a beloved family dog or cat – turning its ashes into a tasteful bas relief image to be hung on the wall.

A former mortician's assistant who became a sculptor and painter, Roberto Ortega had the idea of incorporating pet remains into his work after attending a Day of the Dead celebration in his native Mexico, when relatives honor their late loved ones each November.

 

"I realized that instead of having a dead pet in an urn you can have a custom made piece of art," he said. "I'm an artist and I recycle everything around me. I decided that if the Egyptians can do embalming, why couldn't I do something with cremated remains?"

He now runs a business in which a bereaved owner sends ashes and bone fragments, along with a pet biography, to his PO Box. He then produces an individualized tribute to the animals in the form of a unique framed artwork.

 

"I know the love that you can have for a pet and the companionship they can give," he said. "It borders on the spiritual. And I feel I'm communing with the spirit of the animal as I'm working."

Mr. Ortega, 53, first takes the cremated remains of the pet and mixes them into a paste that includes calcium, oyster shell, cellulose and pumice. The precise formula of what he calls "petstone" is a trade secret.

 

He then studies a photograph of the beloved animal and consults its biography before melding colored pebbles and artifacts representing aspects of the pet's life into the petstone. Finally, the psychedelic pattern is painted and dried using heat lamps before being given an acrylic paint finish.

 

"I've cried as I've worked," said Mr. Ortega, 53, who works from a studio in his small San Diego flat. "It's very emotional. The biographies are just so heartfelt. It's art but it's also aftercare. It might seem a little strange but it brings people a lot of comfort."

 

One of his works is Tasha, formerly a corgi-collie cross. "I had to have Tasha put down and I didn't want to just throw her to the winds so at first I kept her in a little cedar chest in my dresser," said Robin Fulton, 49, a customer service agent and one of Mr. Ortega's satisfied customers. "Now she's on the wall in my living room and I get to see her every day. "I still feel connected to her. She liked toothpaste – she wouldn't go to bed without having some Colgate gel – and so Roberto used a tube of it in the picture. "Some people get kind of freaked out but I think it's cool. Now I've got a big water turtle called Maynard. If he doesn't outlive me, I would definitely get Roberto to do him too." Angel Wade had her cat Rainbow commemorated. "He was 18 years old and he was spoiled rotten," she said. "It's a beautiful idea because now Rainbow is always with me."

 

Before he died, Mr. Ortega's father said he would like his remains turned into art. "I don't have to visit the cemetery - I have him right here," said Mr. Ortega, pointing to a large frame in his bedroom. "On the Day of the Dead, I light candles in front of my dad and make a little altar."

 

Mr. Ortega prefers larger animals because there are more remains to work with. "AChihuahua or a cat only produces about a few ounces of ashes whereas a Doberman is half a pound. "What I'd really like is commissions to do exotic animals, like a memorial for a panda."

He would also like to work with more human remains. "I'd need a really good contract from a lawyer. But I've already done my dad and I'd like to take it to the next level." 


Posted by Ashworks at 8:54 AM PST
Updated: Friday, July 7, 2017 6:24 AM PDT

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