Lights, Geometry and Kinetics at Frieze 2010

Fractal sculptures take center stage at London’s biggest art fair

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With the resurgence of handmade and traditional craftsmanship consuming the design industry, it came as no surprise that this year’s Frieze Art Fair was filled with beautifully-executed DIY style—from artworks as text to compositions crafted from beads. Juxtaposed against the handmade charm however, an exciting theme of lights and kinetic geometry married art and science for an innovative approach to sculpture.

Olafur Eliasson‘s “Untitled Sphere” (working title) (2010), a dramatic geodesic light sculpture, doubles as a lampshade. Matte black on the outside with yellow foiled mirror triangles inside, the faceted sphere creates infinite reflections of light and images inside the shade. (Pictured above right.)

Next to Eliasson’s piece at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery’s stand, Tomas Saraceno‘s “Hydrogen Cloud Explosion” (2010), a suspended geometric sculpture of transparent acrylic and tensile strings, seemed to explode outwards in the opposite direction of Eliasson’s heavy glittering imploding shade.

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All the reflections created by Bojan Sarcevic‘s transparent deconstructionist sculpture of thin acrylic inside a glass vitrine almost rendered the work invisible. At The Approach Gallery Germaine Kruip cast more spellbinding light around with his “Counter Composition III” (2008), a geometric mirror sculpture that smoothly rotates in different directions, fragmenting the view from all sides.

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Less disorienting, Lygia Clark‘s “Desfolhado” (1960) sculpture complements her minimalist geometric collages and urges you to pick up the aluminum-hinged construction and explore its many folding forms. Clark’s work from the ’50s and ’60s seemingly inspired the contemporary fold prints by Iran do Espírito Santo at the Ingelby Gallery, “Twist 6B” and “Twist 6C” (2010).

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Florian Slotawa‘s series of white pendant lights, “SG 07” (2010), at the Sies + Höke Gallery, played host to parasitic geometric limbs protruding at strange angles. At the Marian Goodman Gallery, Pierre Huyghe‘s vaguely sinister aluminum and LED mask called “The Host and the Cloud” (2010), looked like it might be used as protection from Saraceno’s nearby “Hydrogen Cloud Explosion.”

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But the highlight of this theme of light and kinetic geometry was spotted at the Victoria Miro Gallery, in Conrad Shawcross’ “Limit of Everything” (2010). This revolving light sculpture echoed many of the pieces that came before, expansive as Saraceno’s “Hydrogen Cloud,” moving smoothly as Kruip’s “Counter Composition III” and as angular as Slotawa’s light arms. Shawcross’ mechanical pinwheel was a beautiful, ever changing, semaphoric display of minimalism.


Alex Randall Bespoke Lighting

Chandeliers made from meat hooks and rodent lamps from a London-based sculptor

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After graduating from Chelsea College of Art & Design with a sculpture degree, Alex Randall started making her wildly surreal one-off lamps in 2006—just a year later picking up Liberty’s Most Promising Newcomer award.

Earlier this year, the sculptress caught our eye with her squirrel lamp at NYC’s ICFF and more recently she took her work to Tent London as part of London’s Design Festival. Against a backdrop of light, natural wooden furniture, uplifting colour and excitable young designers, Randall’s beautifully provocative work stood out for its singular bleak, visceral and bloodthirsty vision.

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Perhaps a subtle reference to the prominence of rodents in London (supposedly you’re never further than three feet from the creatures), the Rat Swarm lamp is a thing of dark pleasure.
The On a Thread chandelier (pictured here, with its dangling, rusty saw blades, continues the macabre theme. Made from a couple of wooden legs—the light shines out from within its hollows— Patience, like all Randall’s work, dislocates her subject matter context.

Where past seasons have seen many designers referencing the antler as a motif, most choose to beautify the object—removing the Antler from the action of death. Unsurprisingly, Randall moves the opposite way, hanging hers from a series of meaty hooks for an effect that’s still beautiful but more sympathetic to the lineage of item.

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Young, intelligent and not afraid to combine the beautiful and the shocking, Randall is a truly wonderful addition to the industry.


Aldo Lanzini at Missoni’s Spring/Summer 2011 Show

From runways to galleries, the philosophical needlework of a rising Italian artist
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Aldo Lanzini‘s beautifully alarming crochet masks most recently made an appearance at Missoni’s Spring/Summer 2011 fashion show when the 30 ushers wore them to seat people. While the riotous colors and fantastical faces make compliment the Italian label’s renowned knitwear well, their bold expressions and strange forms of the maskes are a spectacle of their own.

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Splitting his time between Milan and NYC for the past 15 years, Lanzini has been quietly building a large army of loud characters with his expressive needlework, explaining to Vogue Italia that his pieces are “the condition of contemporary man, some kind of conscious schizophrenia.”

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Lanzini’s work can currently be seen at Milan’s Le Case D’Arte, where he transformed the gallery into visceral experience that amplifies the senses through visual, sonorous, tactile and olfactory elements. Dubbed “The Drop,” the exhibition speaks to Lanzini’s constant investigation of how the process of creation affects the everyday life and is on view through 11 December 2010.


Crayon Totem Sculpture

Diem Chau si è divertita a scolpire pastelli di cera.
[Via]

Crayon Totem Sculpture

Crayon Totem Sculpture

Small Is Beautiful

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Thankfully, not everyone has outgrown the shoebox dioramas of their school days. Opening today, 12 May 2010, at Manhattan’s Murphy and Dine gallery, “Small Is Beautiful” showcases miniature cities painstakingly constructed by five artists. Curated by Scion and Theme Magazine, the accomplished group builds upon the headlining motif, tapping into themes such as childhood, urbanism and cultural diversity.

Acclaimed for his wallpaper designs, prints and decorative arts, Dan Funderburgh (pictured below right) uses 2-D cutouts to create a layered 3-D metropolis (pictured below left) inspired by Maurice Sendak’s book “In the Night Kitchen.”

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Lori Nix is known for building and photographing epic dioramas of natural and modern disasters. In a CH video, Nix gives a tour of her Brooklyn studio. Her architectural model (sketch pictured below left, model pictured top and below right) is a dystopic vision of the future from the 1940s.

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Ji Lee blurs art and commercial design. At CH’s 99% Conference in 2009, he gave a talk about balancing creativity and commerce. Lee’s small-scale work (pictured below) deals with adolescence as an out-of-body experience.

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The show also includes wall vignettes by Josh Cochran and runs until 16 May 2010.


Thom Puckey

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Great work from Thom Puckey, this shot’s from his in-progress gallery.

Check out his site to see the full shoot, as well as his completed projects.

via: booooooom

Heroes : The Route of Exposure

Découverte de cette série de sculptures par Adrian Tranquilli, qui représente les super-héros les plus connus sous un angle fragile. Cet artiste italien a imaginé de mettre en avant leur caractère humain et vulnérable. Des œuvres actuellement présentées à la Louise Alexander Gallery.



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Previously on Fubiz

My Dirty Little Heaven

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With much of her art focused on African diaspora and the female form, Kenyan-born, Brooklyn-based artist Wangechi Mutu transformed the Deutsche Guggenheim into a cocoon-like setting to aptly display the new works in her upcoming solo show, “My Dirty Little Heaven.” Named “Artist of the Year 2010” by the Deutsche Bank Global Art Advisory Council, Mutu’s works are often as complex as the themes that surround them.

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Mutu’s background as a trained sculptor is apparent—her bold collages and poignant site-specific installations are layered with found photos blended together to create body parts, flowers, cars, glitter, fur, and paint. Using duct tape and gray felt blankets she created a backdrop for the exhibit that feels both protective and dilapidated, referencing the pieced-together housing found in shanty towns, places Mutu feels are extremely impoverished yet bursting with creativity. She relays that her exhibition is an homage to these towns, where the people are tenacious and are “actually quite ingenious because they’re still alive despite the conditions they live in.”

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Earning an MFA from Yale University, Mutu is as insightful about cultural affairs as she is artistic techniques, making for a highly intelligent and well-composed exhibition. Her collages vary in size from large Mylar works to pieces made on a postcard, each thoroughly conceived and undoubtedly portraying her interest in creating a “human economy.”

My Dirty Little Heaven” opens 30 April and runs through 13 June 2010.


Haroshi

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Great art pieces made from old skate decks.

“Haroshi makes his art pieces recycling old used skateboards. His creations are born through styles such as wooden mosaic, dots, and pixels; where each element, either cut out in different shapes or kept in their original form, are connected in different styles, and shaven into the form of the final art piece.”

Check out his work here.

Future Flower by Tonkin Liu

London architects Tonkin Liu have completed a wind-powered metal flower beside the River Mersey in England. (more…)