Figurative Mixed-Media sculptures of Cathy Rose. (Nouvelle Orléans / Louisiane)
« I’m an artist. I’ve been saying this since I was nine and now I’m 59 and I think I’m starting to believe it. »
Figurative Mixed-Media sculptures of Cathy Rose. (Nouvelle Orléans / Louisiane)
« I’m an artist. I’ve been saying this since I was nine and now I’m 59 and I think I’m starting to believe it. »
Figurative sculptures of Carrianne Hendrickson.
I make work about human and animal nature. I gravitate towards figurative and animal imagery that has a dreamlike quality. I exhibit work locally and nationally. I generally make work under 28” in height as I prefer work that is easily transported, and displayed. I am very much influenced by contemporary figurative art. I force myself to work a certain number of hours per week on the actual hands-on creation of my pieces. I work weather I’m inspired or not. If I don’t have a particular idea, I work anyway and let the ideas come. I don’t believe that inspiration is the motivator of art; I believe hard work is. If you work hard enough, inspiration will come. I research galleries and am not afraid to contact them. The worst they can say is no. I also produce as much as I can. I try to find galleries in which my work would fit. Lately, I have been getting more and more invitations to be in shows all over the country. I find this really flattering and love this new avenue that seems to be opening up for me.
She lives in Buffalo, New York, and is represented by Del Mano Gallery in Los Angeles, California.
Beautiful and Grotesque Art-Dolls of Nita Collins (Etats-Unis)
Dans la grâce des anges…
Hyper realiste trophée sculptures – Ruth Collett was born in Knutsford, Cheshire and moved to London to study at Wimbledon School of Art where she received a BA (Hons) in Technical Arts. She now lives in Hampshire where she can usually be found in her second home – the shed! It is here that she creates her fabulous sculptures and between projects also inserts hair for the world-famous Madam Tussauds.
Ruth is very much inspired by great artists such as Ron Mueck and Franz Messserschmidt and this led her to creating her humorous character heads where expression has an important role. She is very much looking forward to extending this unusual family tree !
Steampunk sculptures by Jessica Joslin / « Millennial Gepetto Jessica Joslin spends most of her days at a Victorian watchmaker’s desk, building a menagerie out of brass and bone. She is an unabashed science nerd, antique hardware fetishist and power tool connoisseur. Known associates with the same last name include: husband Jared Joslin, a brilliant painter of dames and dreams and brother in law Russell Joslin, an incisive photographer of personae and the editor of Shots Magazine. »
Magnifique travail du papier / Art Paper & Wire Sculpture by Polyscene (england)
Katharine Morling Fine Ceramics. (England)
« My work has been a personal narrative, which alludes to tales, dreams and nightmares. I bring my drawings alive in 3D. My work is often life-size or larger; a chair will stand a metre tall. The work has been of a domestic nature, taking inanimate objects such as chairs and layering them with emotion. As I build up piece by piece, I have created rooms with atmosphere where unexpected feelings arise from apparently mundane objects.
I work very instinctively, one piece leads to the next, I try not to pin down what I am doing or even why. I have to trust and believe that I can communicate through this medium.
My searching is never complete; each piece is a journey for answers that are only hinted at, with more questions.
I predominantly work in clay but use other materials when I feel it is necessary: glass, string, wood, raffia and mirror. »
Aerial taxidermy art by Claire Morgan, born in Belfast in 1980, and now lives in London.
She graduated from Northumbria University in 2003 with a first class honours degree in Sculpture and is now based in London. Claire has exhibited internationally, with solo and group shows in UK and Europe, and museum shows in US and Australia.
« My work is about our relationship with the rest of nature, explored through notions of change, the passing of time, and the transience of everything around us. For me, creating seemingly solid structures or forms from thousands of individually suspended elements has a direct relation with my experience of these forces. There is a sense of fragility and a lack of solidity that carries through all the sculptures. I feel as if they are somewhere between movement and stillness, and thus in possession of a certain energy.Animals, birds and insects have been present in my recent sculptures, and I use suspense to create something akin to freeze frames. In some works, animals might appear to rest, fly or fall through other seemingly solid suspended forms. In other works, insects appear to fly in static formations. The evidence of gravity – or lack of it – inherent in these scenarios is what brings them to life, or death. »
Sculpture by Byeong Doo Moon South Korean artist.
I have been dreaming to be a tree…II
Wood Art sculptures by Aron Demetz. Italian artist, born 1972. Europe exhibition Rome, Vienna, Milan or London.
Aron Demetz est un artiste italien né en 1972. Il créé des sculptures (bois d’érable et silicone) dans des poses tantôt sombres, tantôt mélancoliques, jouant sur des figures adolescentes ou enfantines.
Elles sentent l’odeur de résine ou de vernis, tente de symboliser les énergies biologiques et cosmiques qui animent tout être humain. A découvrir ses dernieres sculptures carbonisées.
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For years, Aron Demetz (1972) has been focusing on the human figure, on contemporary characters which appear to be frozen in poses of the antique portraiture or paralysed in bizarre postures. This realistic gallery, which very often displays children or adolescents, is highly distinguished because of its formal composure while, at the same time, an atmosphere of melancholic meditation enshrouds the sculptures and makes them somehow classic and somehow stringently modern.
In the last two years the artist has dedicated himself to a different projection of the human figure moving from the reflection and the research on emotions to a form of expression which wants to return to its origins, to the most profound human roots. Next to wood (which, however, always remains the soul of all the works) Demetz started to experiment with different materials such as silver and aluminium foils which bestow an aura of original uniqueness on the works, a condition of ethereal pureness. To the spectator, they suggest a metamorphosis, the feeling of observing a being which is changing, which is ready to start a new life, to exploit new possibilities. Through associations, images and symbols these sculptures speak to collective conscience. Fully aware of their own physicality and their physical and spiritual changes, the sculptures most often evoke the constant and meticulous research of the human “position”. A position which, on the one hand, has to be understood in a symbolic way (‘man’ understood as a symbol of power and at the same time of humility), but on the other, it has to be seen in a real, physical way – a position in a space with whom mankind has to interact daily.
Recently, Aron Demetz presents a series of works which centres around the topic of cujidures – “seams”. In order to approach this new challenge, the artist chose resin as material to create his figures. The needed resin was collected with great patience from the wounds of the trees in the forests in Val Gardena. This instable material which is in constant change has intrinsic characteristics which are highly evocative. It has a strong scent, it can crystallise, melt, change colour (from an intense yellow to red or black), it can be very sticky or even conserve organic traces and small animals inside itself.
By putting resin on his faces and busts, Demetz lays a new skin which saturates, welds or stitches their wounds (which have to be understood as wounds of the soul, as thoughts and important feelings). It is a living skin which not only covers, but even enters the works of art. Once again these sculptures display a range of different, even opposite meanings. Next to stirring life, hope and renewal the sculptures also express something archaic and primitive, a being which visibly evokes a mummified figure and which immediately makes the spectator think of rot and death. Therefore, these works trigger off a reflection on the body as a biological and vital structure with its moods, its smells, its heat and its limits. The works spread a twine of visceral energies which enshrouds everyone who enters the meanders of this primitive cosmos.
Expo : Mexico, DF. http://terrenobaldio.com
Sculptures hyper-realiste macabre de Berlinde De Bruyckere – très éprouvantes.. (née en 1964)
La sculptrice flamande crée des sculptures et des dessins de corps humains souffrants qui ressemblent à s’y méprendre à la réalité. Elle mêle dans ses sculptures des motifs religieux, des images médiatiques et inscrit le motif chrétien de l’être humain souffrant dans l’époque contemporaine. La confrontation avec le corps à laquelle se livre l’artiste conduit à des questionnements sur l’éthique de notre société et sont le lieu d’interrogations fondamentales sur la nature de l’être humain.
Beautiful Floral animal sculptures by Natasha Cousens, Artist & Sculptor. Live in UK, moving soon to New Zealand.
Also, visit in the same way sculptures of BETH CAVENER STICHTER
or ERIKA SANADA
The little girls / Les “petites bonnes femmes” de Valérie HADIDA, sculpteure et peintre. (France)
Diplôme de l’Ecole d’arts plastiques et publicité de la ville de Paris (EMSAT). Travail dans l’atelier de Marielle POLSKA pendant 6 ans. Prix Fondation Paul RICARD en 1991. Expose en galeries depuis 1990.
Ses “petites bonnes femmes” ou lolita: “Elle aime les surnommer ainsi … Sans doute avec un brin de provocation, mais très certainement avec beaucoup de tendresse. Ces figures féminines multiples sont un regard hors temps, hors contraintes, hors normes. De l’adolescente à peine sortie de l’enfance, à la femme mature, elles sont toutes là pour nous rappeler le cheminement de la femme, des femmes. Fières ou faibles, en action ou dans l’attente, fragiles ou fortes, poussées par le vent de la vie ou s’arc-boutant contre ses vicissitudes, aucune ne laisse indifférent… Les “Petites bonnes femmes” de Valérie sont un émouvant voyage à travers l’âme humaine.”
Isabelle RAKOTOVAO (Historienne d’art).
En dehors de la sculpture, Valérie Hadida a aussi animé, pour la télé, les héros de L’Histoire sans fin ou ceux de Bob Morane.
C’est avec l’anti-Shrek, « Chasseurs de Dragons » qu’elle fait ses premiers pas au cinéma. Des dragons qui l’ont menée tout droit à Malaria, le royaume d’Igor.
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The little girls / Lolita’s of Valerie Hadida [France]
School of Visual Arts and advertising of the city of Paris (EMSAT). Work in the workshop of Marielle POLSKA for 6 years. Paul Ricard Foundation Prize in 1991. Exhibited in galleries since 1990.
Her » little girls » or lolita’s: » as she names her … Probably with a bit of provocation, but certainly with great tenderness . These multiple female figures are a timeless look , without constraints, outsized . The teenager barely out of childhood, mature woman , they are all there to remind us of the progress of women, women. Proud or low, action or pending , fragile or strong, driven by the wind of life or buttress against its vicissitudes, none leave indifferent … The « little girls » Valerie sculptures is an emotional trip through human soul. «
Isabelle RAKOTOVAO (Art historian) .
Apart sculpture, Valérie Hadida also led to the TV , the heroes of The Neverending Story or those of Bob Morane.
and the anti- Shrek, » Dragon Hunters » she took her first steps in cinema . Dragons who led straight to Malaria , the Kingdom of Igor .
Creatures by Kelly Connole, beaucoup d’êtres hybrides aux formes de lapins… Elle vit et travaille aux Etats-Unis.
« Quand j’étais une petite fille, dans le Montana les animaux étaient mes compagnons. Plusieurs de mes lapins de compagnie se sont libérés de leurs cages et se multiplièrent . Une nuit de pleine lune, j’ai regardé par la fenêtre de ma chambre pour voir tout un troupeau de lapins dans l’espace entre notre maison et la grange . Le clair de lune brillait sur leur dos, illuminant leurs formes voluptueuses et leurs oreilles curieuses. Quand une volée d’oiseaux a survolé les lapins, leurs ombres fugaces sur leur dos m’a coupé le souffle .
C’est l’un de mes premiers souvenirs , j’avais cinq ou six ans à l’époque, et cela reste l’une des plus belles scènes que je n’ai jamais vu . A cet instant, j’ai vu l’endroit où le ciel et la terre se rencontrent et j’ai senti une partie d’un monde beaucoup plus grand que je ne pouvais alors ou maintenant, décrire avec des mots .
Grâce à cette série de créatures hybrides, j’espère capturer juste un peu de la magie que j’ai vécu cette nuit-là . Les pièces contiennent des fragments de beaucoup d’autres souvenirs et je cherche le lien avec le monde animal. »
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« When I was a little girl living in rural Montana animals were my constant companions. Several of my pet rabbits broke free of their cages and multiplied. One night, on a full moon, I looked out of my bedroom window to see a whole herd of rabbits in the space between our house and the barn. The moonlight glistened on their backs, illuminating their voluptuous forms and curious ears. When a flock of birds flew over the rabbits, casting fleeting shadows on their backs, it took my breath away.
This is one of my earliest memories—I was five or six at the time—and it remains one of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen. At that moment I saw the place where the sky and the earth meet and I felt a part of a world much larger than I could then, or now, describe with words.
Through this series of hybrid creatures I hope to capture just a bit of the magic I experienced that night. The pieces contain layered fragments of many other memories as I seek a connection to the natural world and to others. »
Hilda Soyer, sculpteur ceramiste
Déjà enfant, inspirée par ma mère et ma grand-mère elles-mêmes artistes, le monde de la création était une attirance… Au fur et à mesure de mon existence, il est devenu une évidence, une nécessité.
D’origine hollandaise et bercée par les histoires de mon enfance, le monde féerique m’a toujours enchanté.
De cet enchantement est née mon envie de modeler, sculpter les personnages de mon imaginaire. La terre me permet ainsi de leur donner vie.