Yulia Luchkina – Fine Art painting & Sculptures / born 1980 (Russia)
Sculptures hyper-realistes de Marc Sijan, born in Serbia in 1946.
Sijan’s inspiration was Michelangelo’s David; he was always fascinated by Michelangelo’s awareness of human anatomy and his ability to execute this awareness. However, unlike Michelangelo, Sijan does not celebrate the ideal form; his works are tributes to real people and in their realism, they are unpretentious and gritty and communicate a deep sense of emotion. In order to achieve the ultra-realistic finish, Sijan initially works from a live model and produces a plaster mould. He then sculpts the interior of the mould with tools and a magnifying glass and then casts the figure in a polyester resin. To achieve realistic flesh tones, Sijan applies twenty-five coats of paint and varnish. His goal is to achieve depth, yet translucency and spends as long as six months reproducing these details on each piece.
Creative sculptures figuratives of Dirk De Keyzer, né à Sleidinge, près de Gand, en 1958.
Sculpter n’est pas un choix pour Dirk de Keyzer, c’est avant tout sa nature propre. Il façonne surtout des femmes élégantes au visage déterminé mais aussi des hommes à l’air farfelu. Ils rayonnent un goût de vivre sans complexe et poussent leurs observateurs au relativisme. Dirk de Keyzer est un pur créateur de formes et de silhouettes qui renvoient à la réalité mais qui en sont aussi une interprétation restant toutefois fidèle à l’harmonie ou à l’esthétique.. Son travail au fil du temps s’imprègne d’un univers singulier, hors du réel, féérique et magique.
(source : Barthoux)
Sculptures poétique Clementine De Chabaneix. (France)
« I work with epoxy resin or ceramic, iron and sometimes wood.
I often sculpt young ‘ Burtonian’ girls, kind of « Alice in Wonderland », teenagers, romantic, a bit gothic…
My work is about leaving childhood, metamorphose, struggle.
I draw also with very thin lines, minimalist black and white drawings, with the same subject. »
L’un des plus grand sculpteur hyper-realistes expose à Paris
CHOI XOOANG (Corée du sud)
« The Blind for the Blind »
Galerie Albert Benamou
6 March to 17 April 2014
Galerie Albert Benamou – Véronique Maxé
24 rue de Penthièvre
75008 Paris
Glauques sculptures mixed media art of Monica Cook. (Etats-Unis)
Oui, je crois qu’il est temps de créer un style artistique,
du genre « The Awful Art » dédié aux gens (qui comme moi),
ne comprennent rien à l’Art contemporain.
Neo-Pop artist Dan Colen (American, b.1979) is a multimedia creator who has made quite a name for himself with his unique painted sculptures, gum paintings, and installations.
Quand l’Art devient grotesque, sans interet et immonde.
When Art becomes grotesque, without interest and filthy.
Les « oeuvres » de Tiina-Liisa Kaalamo (Finlande).
Technique mixte, entre autres, fourrure, crânes de rat et queues de… ? peu importe.. et le sens figuratif, l’interet, un message ? L’exploitation animale où encore la génétique à coup sûre ?
Mixed media Sculptures of Anna Gillespie (England) – Bristol based artist producing drawings and representational figurative sculpture using contemporary disposable materials and bronze.
The sculpture shows the time of gathering but also a gathering up of transience, as if by embracing time you might stop its perpetual motion. And in bronze it is caught forever.
In such work the distinction between the human and the natural world is blurred, reminding me of Ovid’s ‘Metamorphoses,’ in which people are transformed into trees, birds, and flowers. In all the tales the transformation is an act of mercy – so the self-obsessed, lovelorn youth Narcissus becomes a flower instead of suffering death, and the devoted old couple Baucis and Philemon are changed into trees at the same time. There is real compassion in Gillespie’s work too, and she would understand that process of becoming, for in those sculptures which do not make use of the twigs and seeds which became a characteristic so beloved of her admirers, there is still a struggle to break free of what was and become something else. So a white figure is imprisoned within a stone wall, and people wrapped in duct or masking tape are infused with extraordinary energy and given the gift of flight.
This is the work of an artist at the height of her powers, who is involved in an endless process of change herself – a serious, passionate quest for synthesis.
Bel Mooney
Figurative Sculpture of Cristina Cordova. (USA)
Cristina Cordóva, a Penland artist in residence, is a ceramist whose delicate, whimsical human and animal forms spark our imagination and curiosity. She discusses her work on display at the Possibilities: Rising Stars of Contemporary Craft exhibition at the Mint Museum of Craft and Design in Charlotte.
Bob Quinn – Sculptures figuratives (Ireland)
D’Inspirations : Giacometti, Degas et ça me rappelle beaucoup l’univers de Valerie Hadida.
Lycra Textile Figurine of Esther de Groot / Netherlands
Nude collection / 50 x 10 x 10 cm
Syrian-Swedish Artist Alexander Hadad – Born in Syria in 1961. Lives in Norrköping, Sweden.
« My artistic realm is based on two cultural perspectives – Oriental and Swedish. The connection and contrast between these two cultures represent for me a persistant source of inspiration that allows me to constantly find new ways for my artistic creation. »