Sunday, December 12, 2010

Anish Kapoor


In the early 1980s, Kapoor emerged as one of a number of British sculptors working in a new style and gaining some international recognition with their work. Kapoor's pieces are often simple, curved forms, usually monochrome, and frequently brightly coloured. Powdered pigments sometimes cover the works and sometimes lie on the floor around the works as well. This practice is inspired by the mounds of brightly coloured pigments Kapoor saw on his visits to India.
i think this artist made up a new kind of abstract style just my opinion.

Aaron Hauck

Its Polar time


Aaron Hauck, he's a professor at East Central University and has become a friend that I respect very much. I respect his work and he has made me humble is the way I act and my work which I needed before I move on in my art career.

Seeing Aaron work on his sculpture and digital imaging shows similar characteristics not in our work, but they way we look at things i believe. We both want things to come out exactly how we want them to almost to a perfect state and aren't satisfied with that sometimes which is another reason I respect you so much Mr. Hauck.

www.aaronhauck.com

I dont wanna copy anymore pictures cause I would like for yall to visit the link and look at all the work not just 2 or 3 pictures.

Andy Goldsworthy

Andy Goldsworthy was one of the first artist's Arron taught me, ive learned after taking sculpture and looking back that this is one of the most fundamentally sculpture artist to learn from. His work is not only amazing but makes you have respect and be humble
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Happy Break!



weird

Australian Emily Valentine Bullock sculpts, primarily using feathers, which she collects from birds killed by cars and cats, and from people's dead pets. More recently, she bought a trapping and killing machine to collect feathers from Australia's registered pest, the Indian Mynah. She plans to venture to Ada, Oklahoma, US to reap the bounty of feathered friends in the university's industrial design outdoor studio. From these oddly sourced materials, she creates very odd, but rather beautiful sculptures. Most of these are strange hybrid creatures—dogs with wings and bird-headed dolls. She also makes beaded and feathered brooches and bangles which can be purchased directly from her studio.

What I love most about Bullock's works is the way she juxtaposes the morbid with the appealing. Her hybrids are like taxidermied critters from a fantasy land, offsetting any ghoulishness with her use of color and the fact that the sculptures are just so damn cute.

Epic Win - assemblage

Old car parts = awesomeness


When cars die, they don't go to some magical car heaven (except for hybrids, maybe). But the best, luckiest ones just might become Transformer replicas. Standing at 87 inches tall and weighing a respectable 485 pounds, this Optimus Prime statue is a probably the most compelling argument for recycling we've ever seen. And its leg detail is as incredible as the torso:

At $4,838.71 (plus shipping, of course), we'd say that this hand-crafted Transformer has adownright reasonable price. But that's not going to help one bit as we pitch the spouse on another car...that can't actually run.

Andy Goldsworthy

Goldsworthy,is a British artist who collaborates with nature to make his creations.He regards all his creations as transient, or ephemeral.He photographs each piece once right after he makes it. His goal is to understand nature by directly participating in nature as intimately as he can. He generally works with whatever comes to hand ;leaves twigs stones, snow and ice,reeds and thorns.

Happy Holidays everyone! Festive times ahead call for fun art. So, that being said, here are some cheetos sculptures!





Note the epic grandeur of the subtle cheeto. See how it can be shaped and molded to anything the imagination can fathom!


Surely none can argue with the malleable majesty that each crunchy morsel contains!






















What a wonderful world we live in that the noblest of snack foods can finally be given its artistic due!

Why, even the heavens have begun to celebrate this versatile little snack!




Lets all celebrate the cheesiest of poofs this holiday season!






It's been a fun year guys, have a great break, see you all next semester!

Chris Dorosz


Chris Dorosz gets his inspiration from paint drops, the free form of them then he created the sculpture from them together piecing them together.

J Christopher White


J Christopher White does wood sculpture and his diversity puts him in a class of his own and becoming known as the fastest upcoming wood sculpture.

James Corbett


James Corbett has been sculpting since 1999 in Australia and gets most of his inspiration from things he loves the most as cars and cycling which he owns shops of.

Pierre Riche


Pierre Riche has been sculpting since 1992, hand crafted amazing work is what I would sum it up to be, stuff i would like to build off and take ideas from to improve my skills.



Bruce Gray

Bruce Gray is a metal sculptor, and his style the way he looks at things are kinda the way I invision things in my head as I look at things and how they should piece together.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

E.C.U. Gallery

Claes Oldenburg (born January 28,1929) is a sculptor, best known for his public art installations typically featuring very large replicas of everyday abjects. Oldenburg was born in Stockholm,Sweden,the son of a Swedish diplomat.As a child he and his family moved to the United States in 1936, first to New York then ,later to Chicago where he graduated from the Latin School of Chicago.He studied at Yale University from 1946 to 1950, then returned to Chicago where he studied under the direction of Paul Wieghardt at the Art Institute of Chicago until 1954.

Blog Success

The blog is now for the first time operating at full strength!

Alberto Giacometti

Although he trained in Geneva, Alberto Giacometti settled and worked mostly in Paris. He began working in sculpture with Antoine Bourdelle, but embraced Surrealism in 1930 on meeting Andre Breton. He also was interested in the intellectual aspects of Existentialism and studied in their circle with leader Jean-Paul Sartre. In 1935, Giacometti was forced out of the Surrealist movement and began to develop his own style of unusual, ghostly figure paintings. His sculpture contained the same abstract elements, most notably his bronze statue, Thin Man.


His sculptures to me are a form of simple abstract but that is just my opinion.

Tony Smith

Once in a rare while you come across a public sculpture that so transforms the space its in that it takes your breath away, and you return again and again to see if surprise and delight vanish with familiarity. Tony Smith was one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. A sculptor, painter and architect who apprenticed with Frank Lloyd Wright, he reached international fame in the sixties and seventies as a sculptor

Tony Smith mixed art and math; for him, it was the most natural thing in the world. He spent hours by himself, making buildings and miniature cities from small medicine boxes. He put the boxes—cubes and other polyhedra—together in different ways for his creations.

i like the way he put math and art together and created an abstract sculptures.

Livio De Marchi



Livio Marchi was born in Venice. He studied art and drawing in Venice at the Accademia de Belle Arti. He creats large works out of wood. These works include a cars, a cinderella carriage with horse, clothes, and more.

James Corbett

James Corbett stared created sculptures out f old car parts seen 1999. He began doing sculture out of car part because he ran an auto recycling business in Brisbane. He dose not bend any of the parts to that he needs created the sculture so that the integrity of the car parts remains.

Deborah Butterfield and company



Deborah Butterfield likes to work big she creates horses in all sizes but it is the monumental bronzes and steel structures that seem to capture her imagination the most. She and her husband also an artist live on a 350-acre ranch just a few miles outside of Bozeman Montana.

Chris Dorosz


Chris Dorosz creats sculptures of paint drops. He uses this like the molecules that make of a human body or an object. The paint is on clear strings that creat the from as you can see. He says it is like DNA. That is where he states thinking in this way to created each sculpture.

Ptolemy Elrington


Ptolemy Elrington creates sculpture using different types material that are recycled or reclaimed like hubcaps, shoppimg cats, telephones, telephone cords, wire, and other ideams to created animals.

Saul Hernandez

Saul Hernandez creats sculptures that are skeleton that are doing everyday events like playing soccer, reading, playing a guitar and others. Their are other sculptures that depict a different sitting with the skeletons that have wings that appear to being pulled by another skeleton as you can see. These sculptures are mounted on bases of marble, onxy and stainless steel. The sculpture itself is made in bronze with a wax of silver.

Herb Williams

Oh where did all of the crayons go. Herb Williams makes sculptures of of yes crayons. He was born in Montgomery in 1973. He has a BFA in sculpture from Birmingham-Southern College. He has received The joan Mitchell Foundation Museu Purchase Grant in 2004 as well as the Next Star Artist Award in 2008. This style that he created came to him in 1998. Each piece that he creats take from anwhere from hunderds to thousands of crayons.

Jason Hackwerth




So you go to a birthday party and you see a clown makeing bloon animals dose that make what he is creating a sculpture. Then way i ask dose it make this man Jason Hackwerrth pieces made out of the same bloons called a sculptures. They are also made for people to wear as well. Yeah. So. He makes creaters that appear to be between a bug and a sea monster. These works take him a couple of days to created. They are very cool to look at and with the mass of them makes them interesting to look at, but i just dont know about calling them sculptures. What do you think?