As I've been digging around the site I've found tons of great information about making a pipe from start to finish, but one thing that I've been surprised by is the lack of conversations about aesthetics. Everyone gives fantastic feedback about improvements that can be made to newbies' work, but I haven't really seen a serious discussion of the work of experienced artisans. Because I think that this is crucial to people developing an understanding of aesthetics, I thought I'd start up the conversation. (If this has already been done and I missed it somehow, please let me know.)
The maker that I'd like to start the conversation with is Konstantin Shekita. Reason being, his is the only work that I've seen that makes me uncomfortable by pulling, stretching, tugging, and tearing at the fabric between what I find beautiful and what I find ugly.
Note: unless otherwise stated, photos in this post are from Quality Briar.
Exhibit #1:

When I first saw this pipe I just about fell out of my chair. If we just looked at the proportions of the pipe, they appear solid and well executed. The stem looks good. The finish well done. Technically, I find nothing particularly outrageous or life changing about the piece. However, when you take into account the interlocking weaves of briar that he's done here, I can't help but go... "What?!" To me it is simultaneously beautiful and hideous, which makes me physically uncomfortable. The fact that his work can do that to me makes me respect it. After all, what is art meant to do but make us feel something profound, be it positive, negative, or just plain confused.
Exhibit #2:

When I first saw this pipe I just about fell out of my chair. *looks around* Is there an echo in here? At first glance, this pipe appeared fluid and graceful... but then I actually focused on it and somehow, through the line of the shank in relationship to the bowl, the way the shank lifts up off the table at just the right angle... this pipe makes me extremely uncomfortable. It is simultaneously stiff and graceful, ugly and beautiful. With this contrast, I again have that discomfort that makes me respect it. The line of the shank I think is what achieves this. I expect it to curve up just a little bit more than it does and by pulling down on the shank as it extends (almost as if the shank were a branch and the end is chained to the table in order to shape it), he manages to create something that isn't off enough to be truly ugly, but isn't on enough to be truly beautiful. It blows my mind.
I have no idea how to feel about these pieces of work, but I think they offer a great spring board for discussing what "beautiful," "ugly," "graceful," "stiff," etc. mean aesthetically in a pipe and may help us newbies to gain a better understanding of how to create within the realm of these definitions or, in the case of Konstantin Shekita, to bridge them.
Thoughts? Opinions? Diatribes?