Supple Patterns Illuminate Bold Volumes in Oliver Chalk’s Sophisticated Wooden Vessels
Art
Craft
Design
#carving
#Oliver Chalk
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#stone carving
#wood
May 16, 2023
Kate Mothes More
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Art
Craft
Design
#carving
#Oliver Chalk
#sculpture
#stone carving
#wood
May 16, 2023
Kate Mothes More
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in Art138 Shares109 Views
in Art
Art
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November 22, 2021
Grace Ebert
“By any other name” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 27 x 2 inches. All images courtesy of TERN Gallery, shared with permission
In Splinters and Shards, artist John Beadle enriches the beauty of wood’s natural grain with a series of gouged dots, line carvings, and smooth, supple curves. His small, circular sculptures and vertical towers accentuate the texture and subtle gradients of carbonized mahogany through etched patterns that reveal the pristine reddish hue peeking through the charred surface. Always highlighting the potential of the raw material, Beadle, whose background is in painting and printmaking, evokes these mediums through layering dimension and motif in a single work and drawing on the subtraction inherent in carving into a blank woodblock.
Splinters and Shards is on view at the new TERN Gallery in Beadle’s hometown of Nassau, The Bahamas, from December 11, 2021, to January 22, 2022. Until then, check out the artist’s Instagram for a look at his process.
“Fruit & Texture one” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 28.5 x 2 inches
“Artifact II” (2020), carbonized mahogany and metal, 52.25 x 11.875 x 2 inches
“Fruit & Texture” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 27 x 2 inches
“Eclipse” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 52.75 x 2 inches
“Well Rooted” (2020), carbonized mahogany and metal, 69.5 x 7 x 2 inches
“What’s left behind” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 27 x 2 inches
“Before the chaos” (2021), carbonized mahogany, 27 x 2 inches
#carving
#sculpture
#wood
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#rocks
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October 26, 2020
Christopher Jobson
All photos © José Manuel Castro López.
Spanish artist José Manuel Castro López (previously) transforms nondescript chunks of granite and quartz into squished and dough-like objects, as if each object morphed from solid to liquid and back again in the sculptor’s capable hands. López seems to delight in convincing the viewer that he works with stone as if it were clay. Lately, he’s begun to introduce additional objects that seem to stitch, clamp, or stretch the stones in various ways. While the pieces are obviously not as complex as a Bernini or Michelangelo, they do function as unusual and often humorous studies of various stone carving techniques. You can explore a steady stream of work old and new on his Facebook timeline. (via My Modern Met)
#carving
#rocks
#stone carving
#stone sculptures
Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!
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in Art All images © Misato Sano and Kohei Shikama Misato Sano ensures that she always has a loyal companion by her side, albeit with a little less slobber and fur. Based in the Myagi prefecture of Japan, the sculptor carves wooden busts and full figures of well-groomed dogs, preferring to leave the small gouges from […] More
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in Art All images © Takehiro Kishimoto When he’s not cooking them, Japanese chef and food artist Takehiro Kishimoto (previously) is turning fruits and vegetables into intricately carved sculptures too beautiful to eat. Using sharp handheld blades, Kishimoto combines the centuries-old art of Thai fruit carving with the Japanese art of Mukimono to decorate apples, carrots, […] More
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