Martha Friedman: Rubbers

Rubberbands, sculpture, photography, contemporary art, pop art, Brooklyn artistRubberbands, sculpture, photography, contemporary art, pop art, Brooklyn artistRubberbands, sculpture, photography, contemporary art, pop art, Brooklyn artist Martha Friedman, a Brooklyn-based artist originally from Detroit, is interested in locating the point at which common objects slip into abstraction and, in some instances, eroticism. In her series of cast rubber sculptures titled Rubbers—in her double-entendre style—she explores the nature of sculptural and bodily materiality through food as well as the rubber band. Here I’ve included only the rubber bands which are my favorites. From the colorful chromogenic prints of the oversized stationery supply, to her full room installations, these are just a lot of fun. Wouldn’t it be great to have a pair of those interconnected rubber bands extended from floor to ceiling in your home?

You can see Martha Friedman’s rubber tongues here, and some of here waffle sculptures here.

Photos: James Ewing; Andy Pixel; Purple Kiaris and Wallspace Gallery.

via artslant

Seth Wulsin: Animas

Animas, multi-screen installations, Seth Wulsin, Brooklyn artist, collabcubedAnimas, multi-screen installations, Seth Wulsin, Brooklyn artist, collabcubedSculpture, multi-screen, multi-dimensional heads, mesh sheets, Brooklyn artistSculpture, multi-screen, multi-dimensional heads, Buenos Aires street artSeth Wulsin, Installation, Buenos Aires Prison, Windows as pixels, cool art effectClick to enlarge

I saw one of Seth Wulsin’s Animas installations a few years ago in his studio as part of the Dumbo Arts Festival in Brooklyn. I was very impressed at seeing these large-scale screens hanging from the ceiling that individually just looked like plain screens, but when seen all together from the front, an almost holographic, three-dimensional, ghost-like head would appear floating on the screens.

Wulsin works primarily with space and light through these large-scale, site-specific, ephemeral sculptural installations. His Animas (soul in Latin) series explores the interior dimensions of mind and soul in the physicality of space. Here is how Wulsin describes his Animas sculptures:

Each sculpture has three kinds of inter-dimensional space that all occupy the same spatial coordinates: the concrete, volumetric space of the screens; the pictorial/volumetric space of the images produced by the paint on the screens; and the optical interference generated between the screen grids when two or more planes overlap (without coinciding) , an optically real, but tactically non-existent space.

Also very interesting are his works on the streets of Buenos Aires. The photo second from bottom, are two small Animas embedded in a building front, and the bottom photo is from his work 16 Tons, using the prison window grids of a Buenos Aires prison as a pixelated screen. By breaking out certain windows, images of faces appeared reflected in the remaining panes. Very cool and creepy.

Julius Popp: Bit.fall, Bit.flow, Bit.code

Bit.Fall, technology and art, code, waterfall with type and images, contemporary artBit.Flow, technology and art, code, typography, word art, tubes, contemporary artBit.Fall, Bit.code, technology and art, code, waterfall with type and images, contemporary artClick to enlarge

German artist Julius Popp uses technology to create work that reaches across the boundaries of art and science. Three of his works, Bit.fall, Bit.flow, and Bit.code are pictured above. Bit.fall is an installation that in some cases displays images and, in others, words selected from the internet via drops of falling water spurting out from 320 nozzles controlled by computer software and electromagnetic valves.

In Bit.flow Popp pumps liquid into a 45-meter long tube on a wall. A software program sets out a pattern which only at certain points forms readable forms or letters which then disintegrate into chaos again.

Lastly, Bit.code is made up of plastic chains with black and white pieces which act as pixels. Controlled by computer software, the pixels move next to each other displaying frequently used key words, at certain points, taken from recent web feeds.

All three appeal to me, yet are definitely appreciated more in person. The videos of each below are the next best thing, unless you are in Jerusalem, in which case you can see Bit.fall in the current exhibit Curious Minds at the Israel Museum until April, 2012.

Elements of these installations bring to mind Daniel Rozin’s work (see post) and Christopher Baker’s Murmur Study (see post).

Photos: Artnews, Desxigner, Wallpaper, and Onedotzero’s flickr

Eternal Chair: Shinobu Koizumi

Contemporary stone chair, contemporary furniture, japanese design, embedded clocksContemporary stone chair, embedded clocks, contemporary furniture, japanese designContemporary stone chair, embedded clocks, contemporary furniture, japanese designTokyo-based designer Shinobu Koizumi describes himself as someone who “Proposes unique ‘experiences’ as spaces, furniture, and products.” His most recent creation is the Eternal Chair, made of stone and embedded with multiple glow-in-the-dark clocks with a single second hand each that tick away. As everything decays with time, the decorative clocks are there to remind us that nothing is eternal…not even a stone chair.

via designspotter

Devon Boathouse: Elliott + Associates

Oklahoma City Riverfront, boathouse, Elliott + Associates, contemporary architectureOklahoma City Riverfront, boathouse, Elliott + Associates, contemporary architectureOklahoma City Riverfront, boathouse, Elliott + Associates, contemporary architectureOklahoma City Riverfront, boathouse, Elliott + Associates, contemporary architectureClick to enlarge

I must confess that I don’t know anything about Oklahoma City, but it seems there is a very nice riverfront district that has been undergoing redevelopment over the past several years with three boathouses and a high-performance center in the Regatta District alone. All architecturally interesting, the newest of these boathouses is the Devon Boathouse completed in 2011. Home to the Oklahoma City University Rowing and Canoe/Kayak teams as well as the headquarters for the OKC National High Performance Center, the Devon Boathouse, designed by Rand Elliott of Elliott + Associates Architects, makes for a striking image against the downtown skyline. Its sharp corner creates the impression of a “prow” breaking against the river’s edge.

Expansive windows make for soaring spaces, created by glass and polycarbonate walls, which are flooded with natural light and views. Blue LED lights light up the boathouse at night, adding another dimension to the already dramatic building.

In its 33,000 sq. feet, the boathouse includes reception, event spaces, catering facilities, high performance fitness center, propulsion rowing tank, endless pool, high altitude training room, weight room and locker rooms as well as boat storage and repair area.

Photos courtesy of the Elliott + Associates, Michael Stano, Ryan Fogle, Timberlake Construction, Allied Arts, and Boathouse District

via Michael Stano’s flickr

Lee Boroson: Inflatable Installations

contemporary art installations, balloons, fabric sculpture, Lee Borosoncontemporary art installations, balloons, fabric sculpture, Lee Borosoncontemporary art installations, balloons, fabric sculpture, Lee BorosonClick to enlarge

I love these. All of them. Lee Boroson, based in Brooklyn, has been creating these fun large inflatable installations since the 90s. Huge nylon structures filled with air and, for the most part, suspended from the ceiling, Boroson’s skills in engineering as well as his playfulness come together resulting in these very appealing dreamlike works.

From top to bottom:
Canopy, based on images of volcanic eruptions; Pleasure Grounds; Lake Effect; Giant’s Way; Graft; Integument, based on a 3d medical illustration of a cross section of human skin and depicts hair, follicles, pores, veins, arteries and dermis; and Liquid Sunshine.

Boroson currently has an installation titled Lunar Bower at The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, and will have a large solo project at Mass MoCA in December 2013.

Roof Top Lights

ceiling light, projected photo, illuminated photo of church dome, skylight, disco ballceiling light, projected photo, illuminated photo of church dome, skylight, disco ballceiling light, projected photo, illuminated photo of church dome, skylight, disco ballThis is such a clever idea, especially ideal for the many dark New York City apartments out there. Roof Top Lights, by Lightboys, are large-format illuminated photographs mounted on an ultra-thin housing that contains LEDs. Suddenly, you not only have an overhead light, but a skylight or church dome or treetops, even a disco ball, right over your head, as well! To quote their website “These are images which not only open up rooms, but also hearts and minds…”

Lightboys also make Lightwalls and Polaboys (backlit large-scale photos with the look of a Polaroid).

Very cool, if a bit pricey.

via bb

Wim Botha: Sculpture Made from Carved Texts

Contemporary South African Sculpture made from carved biblesContemporary South African Sculpture made from carved biblesContemporary South African Sculpture made from carved bibles, prison recordsCape Town-based artist Wim Botha is originally from the suburban outer reaches of Pretoria. His work is rooted in the officious pretensions of his nation’s capital using government texts, dictionaries, and bibles to create sculptures based on popular iconography such as trophy mounts and religious icons. In most of these works, the carved text of the piece becomes the physical substance of the work, while the collective text informs the representation of the work as well as providing its social context.

The fourth and fifth photos down from the top are shots of Botha’s recent work, Fuse. which is currently part of a group show at Stevenson Gallery in Cape Town through January 14th, 2012. This piece is made of charred fire-resistant pine while all the other sculptures in this post are made of carved texts.

Photos courtesy Stevenson Gallery, Galerie Jette Rudolph, and mitue’s flickr.

via @turnergalleries

Footbag

Rubber boot shoulder bag by Marco Scuderi, fun design, messenger bagRubber boot shoulder bag by Marco Scuderi, fun design, messenger bag, bike bagHere’s a fun idea that has both of my daughters written all over it. Footbag, designed by Italian designer Marco Scuderi, repurposes pairs of old rubber boots into elegant and sturdy shoulder bags. I would imagine this could really take off after the current rain boot craze subsides a bit in a year or two. So many possibilities with all the fun rain boots that are on the market these days.

via coroflot

The Insinuated Furniture Project

The insinuated furniture project, Ludens, Urban Prosthetics, Mexico City, street artThe insinuated furniture project, Ivan Hernandez-Quintela, Urban Prosthetics, street artLudens,Ivan Hernandez-Quintela, Urban Prosthetics, street art, Mexico cityThe insinuated furniture project, Ivan Hernandez-Quintela, Urban Prosthetics, street artThis concept made me smile. The Insinuated Furniture Project is the creation of Mexican artist/architect Ivan Hernandez-Quintela who started a design collective called Ludens. Hernandez-Quintela considers his designs spatial gags and enjoys invading Mexico City with his ‘Urban Prosthetics’. All his projects are about how people share space and how the objects that surround us affect the way we share it. He believes that each of us has the power to impact a city, one gesture at a time and that could have a contagious effect creating larger impacts from these small gestures. On his Insinuated Furniture Project, Hernandez-Quintela has this to say:

When one live in a city where urban furniture is not a priority, one finds that its inhabitants get creative and improvise by using different constructive surfaces as furniture. Insinuated furniture project is an attempt to call attention to these potential surfaces by drawing silhouettes of recognizable furniture over them.

Insinuated Furniture is a task for people and/or designers to go around the city with masking tape and draw silhouettes on these surfaces. Not to necessarily add objects to the city, but to recognize how existing objects are used, or misused. To help visualize the potential of the city.

via tarp

Nicole Dextras: Ice Typography

Ice Typography, letters, Typography installations, Environmental Art, Vancouver, collabcubedIce Typography, letters, Typography installations, Environmental Art, Vancouver, collabcubedIce Typography, letters, Typography installations, Environmental Art, Vancouver, collabcubedIce Typography, letters, Typography installations, Environmental Art, Vancouver, collabcubedClick to enlarge

I’m not a fan of the cold or ice or even snow, but if I were to come across one of Nicole Dextras’ Ice Typography installations, I think I could bear the frigid temps a little more.

Nicole Dextras is an environmental artist from Vancouver who works in a multitude of media including sculpture, interactive public art and photography. Her Ice Typography series consists of three-dimensional words fabricated in ice ranging in size from 8-foot high letters to 18-inch high. Apart from the striking aspect of these frozen letters standing tall in the outdoors, whether in a rural or urban landscape, is their shifting and transient quality.

From the artist’s statement:
The visual poetry in this series aims to subvert the authority of the English language and the commerce of signage by representing words as vulnerable and shifting. Ice Typography absorbs light, melts and eventually leaves no trace; these words have more in common with dreams and oral stories than linear language. Words cast in ice interrupt our literal narratives, allowing a more integrated reading of the land we inhabit, as opposed to the past and current commodification of land as limitless resource. This fundamental split in perception lies at the crux of our environmental crisis. I therefore choose to create within an ephemeral vernacular to accentuate the collective physical and psychological experience of flux and change.

There are many more of these installations on Nicole Dextras’ site here, and you can see time lapse videos of her Signs of Change series as they melt here.

via artsy forager

Zadok Ben David: Blackfield

contemporary art installation, Israeli artist, Botanical sculptures, metal flower cutoutscontemporary art installation, Israeli artist, Botanical sculptures, metal flower cutoutscontemporary art installation, Israeli artist, Botanical sculptures, metal flower cutoutsIsraeli artist Zadok Ben David, who lives and works in London, created this interesting installation titled Blackfield. Made up of more than 12,000 small steel cut plant sculptures that spring out from a blanket of sand covering the gallery floor, there is a surprise element as one walks around the installation; what initially appears to be all black reveals itself as color on the other side.

Each plant sculpture takes its form from Victorian botanical illustrations which Ben David finds in old text books. The detail on these is quite amazing. The miniature boxed version of the installation, in the next to last row of photos above, shows the two-sided quality of the plants in the mirrored wall.

Here’s a video taken while circumambulating the installation. The effect is even better than I imagined.


Photos courtesy of the artist; artnet; and lemOn’s flickr.

via lemOn’s flickr

Spa House: Metropolis Design

Guest house and entertainment center, spa, pool, contemporary architecture, Cape TownGuest house and entertainment center, spa, pool, contemporary architecture, Cape TownGuest house and entertainment center, cool underwater room, contemporary architectureClick to enlarge

The Spa House designed by Metropolis Design in Cape Town, South Africa, is set on the mountainside on the urban edge of Hout Bay overlooking the bay and harbour, and integrated with the beautiful landscape that surrounds it.

The house functions as the guest house and entertainment facility of a larger house – separated by a hill but connected by footpaths – incorporating swimming pools, spa, and guest accommodations. Let the record show that I, for one, would not mind being a guest. I especially like the room with the underwater views, though I’m sure I would spend much more time on the sunny deck.

The house is quite dramatic, with its separate sculptural forms dynamically combined into one superstructure made of steel construction and clad in afromosia shiplap boards on timber studwork.

via world skyscaper

Farsad Labbauf: Manifestation of Unity

oil and pencil paintings, portraits, Persian Calligraphy, dissolution, figurative worksoil and pencil paintings, portraits, Persian Calligraphy, dissolution, figurative worksoil and pencil paintings, portraits, Persian Calligraphy, dissolution, figurative worksBorn in Tehran, Iran, artist Farsad Labbauf moved to the United States with his family at the age of thirteen. Presently he lives and works in New York.

Labbauf’s paintings are influenced by traditional Persian arts such as calligraphy and tapestry, a link to his cultural heritage. They have a distinctive style, made up of segmented sections of color, that in some cases have a maplike quality.

From the artist’s statement:
To describe and depict something that was, is or will be carries the heavy and imposing predicament of time. And so in describing the world, I have found it necessary to create images that exist halfway between completion and dissolution.
Another main and motivating factor in creating and developing the use of lines in my paintings was the unveiling of a desire for manifestation of unity. Following an urge against segmentation of the painting surface into isolated geographies of color and content, I set out to create a method of pictorial depiction which conveys this idea of unity regardless of content.

You can see more of Farsad Labbauf’s work on his site and here.

David Mach: Matchheads

sculptures made of matches, sculptures that are lit and burned, heads made up of matchessculptures made of matches, sculptures that are lit and burned, heads made up of matchessculptures made of matches, sculptures that are lit and burned, heads made up of matchesClick to enlarge

Yes, I just finished posting about David Mach’s coat hanger sculptures, but this artist has so many incredible works that it merits two consecutive posts, and still there is so much more to see! In his Matchheads, Mach uses thousands of live matches to create heads of famous people, not-so-famous people, busts in the style of Roman sculptures, Asian and African style masks, Picassoesque and Warholian influenced heads as well as many animal heads. Some are monochromatic and others use multiple colors. And if these aren’t  impressive enough in their non-lit form, David Mach also lights them on fire resulting in a charred blackish-gray hue.

Photos from the artists’s site, piglicker’s flickr, Opera Gallery, and Galerie Jerome de Noirmont.

There is so much of David Mach’s work worth checking out. You can see his postcard collages here, his amazing brick train sculpture here, and even more installations here. Oh, and there’s a dominatrix made of dominoes here!

David Mach: Coat Hanger Sculptures

cool sculptures made of wire coat hangers, David Mach, Scottish artistcool sculptures made of wire coat hangers, David Mach, Scottish artistcool sculptures made of wire coat hangers, David Mach, Scottish artistClick to enlarge

Scottish sculptor David Mach is a master at creating assemblages of mass-produced objects such as magazines, bricks, books, dominoes, matches, and, as illustrated in this post, wire coat hangers. Though new to me, Mach has received major honors and recognition for his work since the 80s including a nomination for the Turner Prize in 1988 as well as being a Fellow of the Royal Academy of the Arts.

His coat hanger sculptures range from busts to large scale animals. The detail on these pieces is incredible. I wish I knew what the process was like.

Photos from the artist’s site, Malcolm Edward’s flickr, Galerie Jerome de Noirmont, and Aaron Sweeney.

via flickrhivemind

Sculptural Poems by Ragnhildur Johanns

Book art, text, collage, contemporary sculpture, Iceland, Reykyavik, Weird Girls projectBook art, text, collage, contemporary sculpture, Iceland, Reykyavik, Weird Girls projectBook art, text, collage, contemporary sculpture, Iceland, Reykyavik, Weird Girls projectIt’s interesting to note the rise of book- and text-related art taking place during the unfortunate decline of book printing and publishing. As one who has designed many a book, I am very aware of this phenomenon. For the most part, these works seem to be paying homage to books, literature, text, typography, and bookbinding. A repurposing of the objects while highlighting their beauty.

Icelandic artist Ragnhildur Jóhanns is one of these artist. Based in Reykyavik, this young visual and performance artist works books and poetry into most of her work. From text collages to sculptural pieces and performance works that include readings, Jóhanns takes the already beautiful books and makes interesting and beautiful artworks by painstakingly cutting strips of text and extending them past the book pages, or conversely, creating gaps and indents in the pages with the cutouts. The names of two of these series of works are Sculptural Poems and Visual Poetry.

AND if these artworks aren’t quirky enough for you, she’s also one of the Weird Girls from The Weird Girls Project!