Monday, May 9, 2011

Multiple Style Artists


This next blog consist of multiple artist which media follows with the fabrication of books art or sculptures and other contemporary style work.


Susy Oliveira
Print photography designs of nature reconstructed into a 3d sculpture using the images as a texture.

Bird on a log, 2005
Bird on a log, 2005

Night eyes open, 2007

Night eyes open, 2007

Time is never wasted, 2006



Elephant Relaxing
Mike-Stilkey
Stilkey style of art consist a montage of paintings blended together to form one large piece that has a more animated effort as the shape of the object morphs with the book cover they lap over.










Reminiscent
Twelve Months of Drama for the Average Church

George W. Hart


Long ago many artists believed to be able to be an artist you had to have the kowndege of math and geometry. That still remains true today that and it is portrayed very well with George W. Hart work. He uses Geometric Sculpturing with geometric forms, mostly circular, and patterns with relationships derived from classical ideals of equilibrium and symmetry. Hart uses different materials for each design including paper, wood, plastic, and metal. It’s great to evaluate his work because each perspective shows a dissimilar side of beauty. Hart claims he blames his work on historical relationships between polyhedra and art.

Hart has a Ph.D.in 1987 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He also received his M.A. from Indiana University, Linguistics, August in 1979 and a B.S. from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mathematics, and January in 1977. Hart has appeared in the NY Times and other publications.

Some of his arts are displayed at the Albion College, Albion, MI, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, Northport Public Library, Northport, NY , University of California at Berkeley, CS Dept., Soda Hall, Berkeley CA Princeton University, Mathematics Dept., Fine Hall, Princeton, NJ Towson University, Mathematics Dept. and M.I.T., Stata Center, Cambridge, MA.

Dragonflies is the first sculpture I wanted to examine. The design is comprised of dozen laser-cut wood parts, 7.5 inches in diameter. And the shape of each part is reminiscent of a dragonfly. This art piece is closed formed and uses lines in a vertical manner. The void around the center gives some positive space of depth and asymmetry. The abstraction makes it where it also can be something of nature or something of a different matter. From a different angle the shape forms a circular zoom vacuum into the center while from a different angle morphs in a closed star form within the layers pilled around the center. Other samples of his work are similar in the counter balance of lines and geometric shapes which each angle or view changes the form altogether. Samples are his Star Corona inner red star surrounded by a yellow corona and Bouquet made from acrylic plastic.

Dragonflies
Dragonflies


Dragonflies
Dragonflies

Star Corona
Star Corona
Bouquet
Bouquet


Bouquet
Bouquet


Bouquet



 

Herb Williams




“Crayons are a gateway drug. To most adults, the sight and smell of crayons produce specific memories of childhood. The twist in the road to nostalgia is the creation of a new object, from a medium in which it was not intended. This element of unexpected interaction and play had me at hello.”

Herb Williams is another great artist that has found his style of sculpturing in the use of household materials. An ordinary material like crayons has been the focal material for Williams and has created some wonderful crayon sculpture. Williams received his BFA in sculpture from Birmingham-Southern College; he started his unique creation of Crayola statuette, Williams early on got used to matters of form and materials working in construction. He likes to create his art on a large scale which would require many pieces of crayons up to as hundreds of thousands. Williams’ work has been exhibited across the United States and in France and has even been commissioned to design the small duplicate of the white house. He has even been rewarded The Joan Mitchell Foundation Museum Purchase Grant in 2004 and the Next Star Artist Award in 2008. Some of his work is even political has many different designs with Obama administration campaigned mentioned on CNN.


Love Child Series: red, yellow, black, white










The piece is interesting enough with the crayons being the base that forms the outside and inside of the objects but that the figures don’t have and particularly feature to them but their movement. The genders and ages of the children are not defined in any way except for the colors used around them.


Homage To Andre Serrano 15" x 17" x 17"



Bitch Bag (Coach)

Leo Sewell



You know what they say, “One man’s junk is another man’s treasure.” for Leo Swell that is very true. Sewell resides in Philadelphian and continues to work on Junk sculpture artist that u that the material used from scraps. This form of art follows a naturalistic theme, and animals feature prominently in his creations. Most of the texture is made from plastic, metal and wood. Sewell picks of the objects base of from their color, shape texture, and durability. He nails these pieces together with bolts, and nails.
Although when people think of art they usually decide to look at something that has a meticulous beauty to it. Although with Leo’s art it does have a rough texture that shapes his models yet the different colors and designs of his objects inside keep the eye looking ever more around to see something new. The subjects range from some countertop objects to wall and building sizes. Most of his collection is seen in over 40 museums and in private collections worldwide.

Recycled art is something more and more artist seems to be focus on recently which is understandable that the parts are easy to find, they come in their own shape and color and depths.
Anything can be used and transformed into art: Milk bottles, soda cans, toilet rolls, tubes and tires, even driftwood.
Examples of Leo Sewell work is 


Frog | 11in x 24in x 15in
 
 








Duck | 16in x 8in x 16in


 


Teddy Bear | 16in x 13in x 11in


 






Triceratops | 45in x 30in x 90in




 





Ram's Head | 27in x 21in x 20in