Tag: Sculptures

  • Yuko Mohri’s Fragile Sculptures Confront the Inevitability of Change

    On the first preview day of the 2024 Venice Biennale, a torrential downpour sent artists, curators, journalists, and dealers scurrying for shelter. While others fretted about how the art on view would weather the sheets of rain, Yuko Mohri, the sculptor representing Japan that year, felt unusually relaxed. If all this water destroyed a new read more

    Yuko Mohri’s Fragile Sculptures Confront the Inevitability of Change
  • Black & White, Ceramic, And Totally Personal: The sculptures of Katherine Morling – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Other artworks, though undoubtedly originating in autobiography, point toward more universal themes. Undercurrent, for example, depicts two rotary telephones arranged so that each acts as the base of the other. One of the telephones appears normal, ready to use, while the other has keys exploding out of the dial and letters, similarly, blasting upward from read more

    Black & White, Ceramic, And Totally Personal: The sculptures of Katherine Morling – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Ethereal Kites by Hai-Wen Lin Transform into Elegant Garments and Sculptures

    In works that merge sculpture, fashion, and kite-making, Hai-Wen Lin traverses the thresholds that connect one’s physical self, the mind, and the elements. The artist describes their practice as “an act of reorienting: looking back, looking forward, looking in, looking up.” Using a wide range of materials, Lin creates vibrant, abstract compositions in textile often read more

    Ethereal Kites by Hai-Wen Lin Transform into Elegant Garments and Sculptures
  • Traditional African Baskets and Pottery Meet Pop Culture in Donté K. Hayes' Sculptures

    Redolent of African basketry, hairstyles, headwear, and pottery, Donté K. Hayes’ abstract ceramic sculptures may be interpreted as poetic vessels, even though they lack traditional openings. While we easily associate clay pots and round woven forms with ideas related to storage, protection, and even spiritual significance, they also nod to the human head as a read more

    Traditional African Baskets and Pottery Meet Pop Culture in Donté K. Hayes' Sculptures
  • L, Artist Whose Mysterious Sculptures Cast Spells on Viewers, Has Died

    L, an artist whose sculptures and paintings imbued galleries and museums across the US with spiritual potential, has died. ARTnews was unable to confirm a cause of death for L, whose passing was announced this week by various galleries that had shown the artist’s work. The Los Angeles–based artist would have been either 41 or read more

    L, Artist Whose Mysterious Sculptures Cast Spells on Viewers, Has Died
  • The Best Booths at Zona Maco 2026, Where Sculptures Using Natural Materials Shine

    nttnt</div>n</div>nttt</div>ntttt</div>n”,”data”:[{“divId”:”gpt-dsk-tab-list-inlistx-uid6″,”displayType”:”medrec”,”targeting”:[{“key”:”pos”,”value”:”btf”},{“key”:”pos”,”value”:”mid”},{“key”:”pos”,”value”:”in-listX”}],”lazyLoad”:”no”,”lazyLoadMultiplier”:2,”zone”:”list/in-listX”,”sizes”:[[300,250],[300,251]]}]}},{“ID”:1234772530,”position”:7,”positionDisplay”:8,”date”:”2026-02-05 15:59:27″,”modified”:”2026-02-05 16:08:07″,”title”:”Hashimoto Contemporary”,”subtitle”:null,”slug”:”hashimoto-contemporary”,”caption”:”Angela Burson featured by Hashimoto Contemporary.”,”description”:” nnnnnnn ntHashimoto Contemporary, which has spaces in New York and San Francisco, has on view a trio of painters in its booth, offering different aesthetic approaches. Santa Feu2013based artist Madeleine Tonzi offers abstracted landscapes of the desert, which are often framed in the body of a read more

    The Best Booths at Zona Maco 2026, Where Sculptures Using Natural Materials Shine
  • Accepting Their Strangeness: the Sculptures of Clementine Bal – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Similarly, Bal’s work in also influenced by her adult life. “My children also inspire me a lot,” Bal adds. “My characters have sometimes taken their looks, their postures, their reactions. I believe that there is an important part of self-portraiture in my characters.” In building this fantasy world, Bal draws from personal influences while creating read more

    Accepting Their Strangeness: the Sculptures of Clementine Bal – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Mike Leavitt Talks Trash with New Exhibition of Mutated Fake Out Branded Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Your piece “Little Carbon Footprints’ is a Little Tykes Cozy Coup ride on toy, constructed fro m four upcycled wood pallets. It’s pretty faithful to the original.Did you have a Coup laying round to reference? Doesn’t every parent? Ours fills with rainwater out in the yard. And yes, I definitely used it for reference, measured read more

    Mike Leavitt Talks Trash with New Exhibition of Mutated Fake Out Branded Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Gil Bruvel explores the Interconnectedness of Everything with his Wooden Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Sculptor Gil Bruvel’s work seems to be both modern and craft movement inspired at the same time. They are made of hundreds of parts; intricate, yet, when viewed form a distance, are smooth and cohesive. We’ve asked the artist to delve into his process and themes and a bit of his background as an artist. read more

    Gil Bruvel explores the Interconnectedness of Everything with his Wooden Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Good Pain: The Broken Skate Deck Sculptures of Haroshi – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    It’s quite exciting for me to see how unskilled skaters could make tricks, somehow much more [exciting] than to see skilled skaters make tricks easily. Haroshi attributes much of his success to the lessons learned through the DIY ethos of skateboarding. He recalls attempting to master his first ollie. At first, the idea of jumping read more

    Good Pain: The Broken Skate Deck Sculptures of Haroshi – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Predictive Dreams: The Sculptures of Katsuyo Ayoki – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    The decorativeness quoted from other ornamental art in my works are not for challenging; it is for my own expression as a fine artist.” But compared to Hirst and Koons, Katsuyo’s work seems a little anachronistic, a little awkward in a generation accustomed to justifying every fl ourish, embellishment and technical sympathy to the enforcers read more

    Predictive Dreams: The Sculptures of Katsuyo Ayoki – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Nothing To Hide: The Sculptures of JinYoung Yu – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    “My creations represent those who have chosen a life apart from others, as if they are invisible or non-existent beings. Instead of adapting themselves to human society, they enter into their own personal space, avoiding other’s interruptions.” Jinyoung’s vision, message and technique hit full stride in 2008’s A Family in Disguise. Shown as a solo read more

    Nothing To Hide: The Sculptures of JinYoung Yu – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • With The Skill of A Surgeon Brian Dettmer Reveals The Sculptures Hidden Inside Forgotten Books – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Conceptually, I like the idea that I’m working with something that has already’ died’ andI ’m bringing it back to life.” In fact, he’s often repurposing items that may not have otherwise found a second life. When he lived in New York, Dettmer often sourced books from boxes that people would leave on the sidewalk read more

    With The Skill of A Surgeon Brian Dettmer Reveals The Sculptures Hidden Inside Forgotten Books – Hi-Fructose Magazine
  • Nature Made Flesh: Tamara Kostianovsky Turns Upcycled Fabrics Into Visceral Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine

    Somebody asked me recently if I had washed my father’s clothes before using them in the sculptures,’” she says. “I didn’t. They still contain his cells.” These meat sculptures, part of an early series entitled Actus Reus, which is Latin for “guilty act,” were followed by Nature Made Flesh, a project started by Kostianovsky after read more

    Nature Made Flesh: Tamara Kostianovsky Turns Upcycled Fabrics Into Visceral Sculptures – Hi-Fructose Magazine