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Triptyque de la décadence identitaire - Identité québécoise. Colored Pencil Sculptures at WomansDay.com - Jennifer Maestre's Extreme Art. Piled high on the floor of Michigan-based artist Jennifer Maestre's loft is a giant mound of Loew-Cornell colored pencils, the artist's building supply of choice. She produces beautiful, albeit dangerous-looking, sculptures by meticulously poking each through a screen. Prompted by a contest in art school, Maestre began creating sculptures of sea creatures using nails. "But I couldn’t get a lot of variations of form, or the kind of shapes I wanted," she says. She needed a new medium—something pointy and cheap—which is when she started using colored pencils. She sold her first sculpture in 1999 through Mobilia Gallery in Cambridge, Massachusetts, after they saw her work at a local art festival. "They contacted me and said, ‘Oh, we want to represent you. “Ibentina” Maestre named this 13" x 10" x 10" work, which she made and sold in 2008, after an ancient Egyptian sculpture.

“Pelt” “Materialize” “Kraken” This 14" x 12" x 12" creature was inspired by jellyfish, octopuses and sea monsters. “Minx” The Madness of Messerschmidt. Take a look at this startling tin alloy bust. It is called A Hypocrite and a Slanderer. When do you think it was created? Five years ago? Ten? It certainly has the air of something very modern – almost Damian Hirst without the diamonds (as it were). Would it surprise you to learn that this magnificent head was made almost two hundred and fifty years ago? It is the work of Franz Xaver Messerschmidt a German-Austrian sculptor who was born in 1736 and who is most famous for his fixation with and reproduction of heads. Messerschmidt grew up in the household of his Munich based Uncle, Johann Straub, who was also a sculptor and who became the young Messerschmidt’s first master and artistic mentor.

By 1769 he had begun to produce the severe heads for which he would be mostly remembered, influenced by Roman republican busts but with an oddity which removed them from the norm. Image Credit Wikimedia You may also like: You may not have heard of the quoll. This is an Eastern Quoll fawn. Image Credit. Mozart Guerra - Sculpteur. Silenced Geisha and Monkey Brains. Artist Mozart Guerra creates sculptures with foam or polystyrene and covers each one essentially with rope. Notes about Guerra (from bio): Born in Recife, Brazil, in 1962, Mozart studied architecture at University Federal of Pernambuco and obtained his degree in 1986. He worked as a set designer for theatre, cinema, and TV in Brazil while developing in parallel his work as a sculptor.Mozart has been living and working in Paris since 1992 and has taken part in several individual and collective exhibits in art saloons and art galleries in Brazil, France, Canada, Germany, Belgium, Portugal, Spain, Luxemburg and Italy.

Photos © Mozart Guerra Link via Visual News. Destruction and Hope. The elaborate mixed-media sculptures of Kris Kuksi. His work reflects today’s world where “(…) mankind is oftentimes frivolous and fragile, being driven primarily by greed and materialism. He hopes that his art exposes the fallacies of Man, unveiling a new level of awareness to the viewer.” [1] Warning: This post may contain images with nudity. Viewer discretion is advised. Top: Photo © Meta Gallery. Notes about the artist (from bio): Kris Kuksi garners recognition and acclaim for the intricate sculptures that result from his unique and meticulous technique. Top: Photo © Foxtongue. 1.

Kris Kuksi. I’ll Beat You Up. These are interesting sculpture-um-drawings by Claire Oswalt. She uses materials such as graphite, paper, and wood. The last photo in this post shows how they’re constructed. Artwork © Claire Oswalt Link via Beautiful Decay. Martinet. Rusty scrap metal transforms into animal and bug sculptures. At first glance, you probably can’t figure out what these insect and animal sculptures are made of.

Believe it or not, they’re constructed out of things you can probably find at your neighborhood flea market. A flea market is where artist Eduard Martinet goes every time he needs material for his sculptures. And no, he doesn’t live in Boca. He uses kitchen pans, car lights, old typewriter keys, and other other junk sitting around at car boot sales or flea markets to build his sculptures. Mr. Martinet has the uncanny ability to take something rusty and transform it into something beautiful. He carefully sculpts every piece after sketching every angle; the whole process takes a great deal of time.

Would you want these in your home or office? Like this: Like Loading... Ronit Baranga, Clay Sculpture - רונית ברנגה, פיסול בחומר. La Vaisselle étrange de Ronit Baranga. La Vaisselle étrange de Ronit Baranga Je vous laisse découvrir la Vaisselle étrange et les créations dérangeantes en céramiques de l’artiste Ronit Baranga. via. JasonHackenwerth. Pumpkingutter Pumpkin Carvings. 18 Sculptures – Le monde étrange et décalé de Fredrik Raddum. 18 Sculptures – Le monde étrange et décalé de Fredrik Raddum Des sculptures à la fois drôles et déconcertantes réalisées par l’artiste Fredrik Raddum qui nous livre ici une partie de son monde étrange et décalé. Très beau. via.