I was in Kilkenny today and saw a great piece of work by Joe Hogan at the National Craft Gallery. He develops basket woven forms around found pieces of wood.
More of her work can be seen on his website here.
craft
I was in Kilkenny today and saw a great piece of work by Joe Hogan at the National Craft Gallery. He develops basket woven forms around found pieces of wood.
More of her work can be seen on his website here.
Images of eel traps from around the world
An 11th-century papier-mâché deity from China.
from the NY Times
Patrick Dougherty will create a site-specific sculpture over a three-week residency period (May 25-June 15) at Sculpture in the Parklands at Lough Boora Parklands in Offaly. There's an article about it in the Visual Artists Newsheet.
Doppelgänger, Paul McDevitt, 2007, wicker
Paper Sculpture by Robert Carr
Almost 16" & 15 and 1/2, 2002 cardboard, staples, polyurethane, steel bases 182 x 48 x 48" and 177 x 38 x 38"
© 2006 Ann Weber All rights reserved.
Niall de Buitléar - Solo Exhibition at The Lab, Foley Street, Dublin 1
Preview: 15 Feb 6-8pm Exhibition continues until 22nd March
An exhibition of new sculpture and drawing opens on the 15th February at the Lab.
"Niall’s methodological approach, a forging of symbiotic relationships and resonance between the initial building blocks, the processes of manipulation and the resultant forms, appears to be shifting focus. With recent works such as White Cube (woven cable ties) and Untitled (burnt matchsticks), Niall appears to have prioritised a commitment to a primarily sculptural practice. The sculptural processes have in turn led him to a new approach to drawing involving the accumulation of simple building blocks...The shift in emphasis away from the rigidly conceptual practice, away from a strict set of rules in the earlier work to a more flexible, fluid approach, sign posts a new trajectory in his practice. What remains central is the use of found materials, which means in even the most abstract of his sculptural work there is some recognisable element. In this the work can be seen to embody a coexistence of the abstract and the figurative that enable his new articulations to remain tangibly rooted in the world of the everyday. "
- extract from an essay by Peter Richards which accompanies the exhibition.
Reformation, 2006 , recycled miniature miniature bricks. 81 x 70 x 51 Shown next to a temple in Siem Reap, Ankor Watt
Andrew Burton is a British sculptor who's website features a pdf publication called Sculptures from a Land of Bricks and Termites.
El Anatsui is a sculptor from Ghana who works in a range of media.