July 07, 2014

Self-Taught Artist Ben Young Layers Glass Sheets Together To Form Ocean Waves

Sydney-based artist Ben Young creates astonishing glass sculptures that look just like ocean waves. Young puts layer upon layer of hand-cut laminated glass sheets and then hand-carves them into waves and other water forms.

The artist turns the glass sheets into water by hand, drawing, cutting and crafting them from the beginning to the end without the use of any computers. The planning and sketching are the longest and most difficult parts.

Young has spent most of his life by the sea so he has always been inspired by the ocean. It comes with no surprise, then, that he focuses on the sea, trying to capture what he has seen during all those years near the ocean. “I love watching the two dimensional shapes evolve into three-dimensional creations and the different way the light plays inside the glass,” writes the Young. “I love the liquid qualities the glass brings with it. It enables me to play with lighting and watch the glass react.”

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The Beacon
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l.o.v.e
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Plucked 
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Dangerous Curves
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Shore Break
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Parallels lll
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Born in a storm
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Parallels l 
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Anchored

July 04, 2014

E-waste equals e-art by Steven Rodrig

Steven Rodrig is a Cuban-born “inventive and environmentally conscious artist” who transforms e-waste into an array of sculptures including insects, flowers and cityscapes (to name a few). He refers to his work as “PCB (Printed Circuit Board) Mixed Media”.

“It seemed a waste to me to have these individually perfect pieces discarded,” he says.

His vision of the circuit board is described as “an organic living functioning system compacted into a concise physical universe.”

From an early age, Steven created art using unconventional materials. His technical process and imagination received a good workout while he studied mechanical structure at Aviation High School in New York. Repairing computers and other electronic equipment further enhanced his skills.

“My goal is to manipulate each PCB into becoming an organic life form where PCB characteristics become part of the living fabric helping to shape its meaning. Part of my discovery has been to develop special tools and use other tools in an unconventional way in order to manipulate each circuit board to form something other than what it was originally intended."

Bananadata
The Royal Data Throne
Data Spider - V.3
Data Sandal - V.2
Post Apocalyptic Data Hunter: RONIX
Attempt To Transfer Data Into the Organic World v.9
Supporting Her Data
I/O Flies in the Data Spider's Kingdom
Data Spider - V.2
Data Spider - V.1
Data Roach Motel
Sea Turtle Searches for Deep Data
Data Books
Data Roach
Mosquito - Data Drainer
Dragonfly on Limited Time to Transfer Data
Hummingbird Senses Sweet Data
There's No Data Like Home

June 27, 2014

A patinated Bottle Holder decorated with a stamped Design


A wooden bottle holder, patinated with craft paint, diluted with water, allowing the grain of the wood to show through the surface. A text and a graphical design are stamped on with undiluted paint in different colours from the same series.


1. Mix craft paint with water in the ratio 1:1 (half and half). Apply the diluted paint onto the bottle holder with a brush and leave to dry.


2. Dab a foam stencil brush in undiluted craft paint. Apply the paint onto the  foam stamp using the foam stencil brush. Now stamp a text and a graphic design according to your own taste – and in different colours. For example, the word “lemonade”.


TIPP: The bottle holder may be used for three milk bottles, each meassuring 550ml.