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    Recycled Scraps and Discarded Objects Are Fashioned Into an Eccentric Menagerie of Metal Animals

    
    Art

    #animals
    #metal
    #recycling
    #sculpture

    October 27, 2020
    Grace Ebert

    All images © Barbara Franc, shared with permisison
    London-based artist Barbara Franc (previously) upcycles materials that otherwise would be tossed into the recycling bin to create a quirky menagerie of metal creatures. Composed with scraps and copper wire, the lively sculptures generally are indicative of movement: owls lift a talon mid-waddle, two cats peer over their shoulders with surprised expressions, and a squirrel appears ready to scurry off.
    The diversity of Franc’s creatures mimic the breadth of materials utilized. She often begins by creating a wire-netting form before attaching the found objects—which include a combination of windscreen wipers, dog leads, keys, cupboard handles, cutlery, biscuit tins, old spanners, metal clips, costume jewelry, and clock and watch pieces—that she sources from yard sales, thrift shops, builder’s dumpsters, and along the roadside as she walks. When attached to the body, logo-printed scraps form a bushy tail and chess pieces create ruffled chest feathers.
    Franc notes that she creates to celebrate other species rather than out of sentimentality. “It is more about a very positive feeling of respect for the huge diversity of life on our wonderful planet and the knowledge that Life itself will always be there. Animals just symbolize that for me in an uncomplicated and direct approach as there is no human element to confuse the issue,” she says.
    Purchase one of Franc’s animalistic sculptures from her shop, and follow her latest recycled pieces on Instagram.

    #animals
    #metal
    #recycling
    #sculpture

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    Welded Stainless Steel Creatures by Georgie Seccull Twist and Unfurl in Eternal Motion

    
    Art

    #animals
    #metal
    #metalwork
    #sculpture
    #steel
    #welding

    August 27, 2020
    Christopher Jobson

    Zenith & Nadir, 2020. All images by Andrew J Bourke, © Georgie Seccull, shared with permission.
    Australian sculptor and installation artist Georgie Seccull creates large-scale stainless steel sculptures of animals and other creatures seemingly locked in motion. Comprised of numerous pieces cut from metal sheets, the materials lend themselves to organic forms like feathers, scales, wings, or the armaments of crustaceans. Seccull’s work scales up dramatically in her installation practice where she’s filled entire rooms and atriums with suspended pieces.
    “We are born out of chaos in darkness and come into the light—my process is much the same: I begin with a thousand pieces scattered on the ground, then working almost like a jigsaw puzzle, I pick them up one by one and allow each piece to come together organically and dictate the outcome,” the artist shares in a statement.
    One of Seccull’s most recent sculptures has been nominated for a Beautiful Bizarre People’s Choice art prize, and she has an upcoming solo show at the Gasworks Art Park near Melbourne. You can see more of her work on Instagram.

    The Beyond
    Cancer Rising
    Dancing in the Dark
    The Gatekeepers, detail
    Through the Dark
    Resistance, 2019
    Return to the Source
    Artist Georgie Seccull in her studio.

    #animals
    #metal
    #metalwork
    #sculpture
    #steel
    #welding

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    Sprawling Metal Forms Elegant, Sculptural Jewelry by Designer Laura Estrada

     All images © Laura Estrada Jewelry, shared with permission Los Angeles-based designer Laura Estrada handcrafts sustainable jewelry pieces that are conceptually driven, sculptural adornments for the body and face. She uses ancient metalsmithing techniques to create timeless, wearable heirlooms that merge fashion with art. “From a very young age, I have been building little objects […] More

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    Barbed Wire, Rusty Knives, and Found Objects Mend Artist Glen Taylor’s Broken Porcelain

     “My grandmother’s china.” All images © Glen Taylor, shared with permission Artist Glen Taylor solders ridges of metal to porcelain fragments, completing a halved teacup or broken saucer with a range of unusual materials: barbed wire, tarnished silverware, old book pages, and multicolored twine form a portion of the household objects. Each intervention contrasts […] More

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    Human Metamorphosis Embodied in Rosemary Holliday Hall’s Oxidized Chrysalises

     All images © Rosemary Holliday Hall by Aron Gent, shared with permission Chicago-based artist Rosemary Holliday Hall envisions transformation through Encyclia Imagosis, a sculptural series that brings the physical processes of insect metamorphosis to a human scale. The four artworks consist of oxidized fabric stretched across metal structures, creating a translucent form that highlights […] More

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    Mimicking Architectural Sketches, Artist David Moreno Forms Sculptures of Countless Metal Strips

     All images © David Moreno Rotterdam-based David Moreno (previously) prefers his spatial pieces to oscillate between initial sketches of architectural projects and fully-realized constructions. His steel sculptures are comprised of lengthy metal strips and piano strings that are arranged to form building complexes, cathedrals, and steep flights of stairs. Despite being three-dimensional artworks, they […] More