Monday, 29 September 2014

2D-3D sculptors

2D to 3D is found within a variety of things for example, toys, furniture, sculpture and stage crops. I have done a little search into 2D-3D and found these images below. firstly, paper machetes are made first before using any other materials.

I have looked at a couple of artists that make sculptures out of 2d and make it 3d Pablo Picasso is the first artist I looked at and below are a couple of images of his work.

Pablo Picasso
This piece of work was made in 1967 and is called the Chicago Picasso it's an untitled monumental sculpture by Pablo Picasso in Chicago, Illinois. The sculpture, dedicated on August 15, in Daley Plaza in the Chicago Loop, it is 50 feet (15.2 m) tall and weighs 162 short tons (147 t). This sculpture by Picasso was the first major public artwork in Downtown Chicago, and has become a well known landmark.
Picasso: Guitars 1912-1914
This was made using Paperboard, paper, string, and painted wire installed with cut cardboard box
This image below of picassas guitar was made with Ferrous sheet metal and wire.
Jean Buffet


Matt Johnson
Matt Johnson rose to prominence with a small sculpture Breadface 2004 that was effectively adopted as a logo for a survey exhibition of recent sculpture from Los Angeles at the Hammer Museum at UCLA in 2005. It was cast in plastic and meticulously painted to look liked the crusty end of a loaf of bread with eyes and mouth crudely torn out of it to form the appearance of a face. Matt Johnson is a sculptor unafraid to take on the great themes in a search to unearth some of the more fundamental sources of expression. The crust of bread fashioned into a face is a basic child like form, His Pieta 2005 made from car exhaust pipes, silencers and wheel rims, has a clear association with welded steel sculpture of the 1960s and 70s and a young man’s interest in cars.


Bread face 




Alison Jacques Gallery Matt Johnson-1

2008
Casting tape, rebar, plywood, cement, plastic, spray paint, glass, aluminium, enamel paint

Sentinel (Orange) (detail)













Jake & dinos chapman
The sculptures “Hell Sixty-Five Million Years BC” (2004-2005) or “Two Legs Bad, Four Legs Good” (2007), dinosaurs composed of toilet paper rolls, cardboard, and poster paint,
Jake and Dinos Chapman - Hell Sixty-Five Million Years BC









 



No comments:

Post a Comment