J O H N   C H I A P P O N E

3-D Art
S C U L P T U R E

.
DIMENSIONALITY
 

FULL-ROUND

  - Three-dimensional
  - Freestanding
  - Sculpture

 

 

Michelangelo Buonarroti
1475 – 1564

 Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, poet, and engineer.
VIDEO


Moses for the tomb of Pope Julius II
 

Tomb of Giuliano di Lorenzo de' Medici Night and Day


Pietà, St Peter's Basilica (1498–99)

 

Henry Moore

 

Henry Moore
1898-1986
English

 

His reclining figures were inspired by  Chacmool figures from Mexico.



Two Piece Reclining Figure No. 5
, Bronze, (1963–1964), Kenwood House, London


Three Piece Reclining figure No.1,
(1961), Yorkshire Sculpture Park


Kew Gardens

Duisburg SLM Moore 02.JPG
Denmark

Three Piece Vertebrae
(1968-1969)


Oval with Points
, (1968-1970),
Henry Moore Foundation

Stuttgart-henry-moore-liegende.jpg


Three Way Piece No. 2 (The Archer),

(1964-1965), Toronto City Hall Plaza

Freiburg Moore 244.jpg Hakone6.jpg
 

Auguste Rodin
French, 1840-1917

 

.
REALISM
 
  Duane  Hanson
Anatomical Plastination
by Gunther von Hagen

Body Worlds is a controversial exhibition showcasing  dissected and preserved human bodies. The bodies are preserved using a process called plastination.  Gunther von Hagen is the artist and invented of plastination. Gunther’s website is: www.bodyworlds.com/en.html


 

 

RELIEF SCULPTURE

 

Auguste Rodin
 


Relief sculptures project from a background, and can only be viewed from the front.

 

Michelangelo

LINEAR SCULPTURE
 

Linear sculptures utilize: wire, tubing, or rope. Linear also refers to sculpture that uses 2-d  (two-dimensional) shapes.

MOBILE by Alexander Calder (1898-1976)

Calder  invented: the mobile, kinetic sculpture (see below), and wire sculpture.
 

STABILE


ORIGAMI






Amazing Origami of Robert Lang

TED  Site:  http://www.langorigami.com

Origami by Eric Joisel



 


 

 

METHODS OF CREATING SCULPTURE

CONSTRUCTION:

  
 Papier-Mâché

3D Printing

3D printing PEN

Louise Nevelson (1899 – 1988) was an American abstract expressionist artist. She's known for her “assemblages”. These are  crates that contain found objects, and are grouped together. Nevelson said, "when you put together things that other people have thrown out, you’re really bringing them to life – a spiritual life that surpasses the life for which they were originally created."

 

MANIPULATION:

 

 

Face Off

SUBTRACTION:

Guy Reid

FERNANDO AGUADO

Marble Sculpture by Stijepo Gavric

LOST WAX METHOD:


KINETIC SCULPTURE

Japanese Fake Pool
 

BMW GINA Light
 

Theo Jansen
 

Anthony Howe


EPHEMERAL ART

Ephemeral art is temporary.

Underwater Sculpture
Burning Man - Photos
Sand Art

Christo's Valley Curtain

Academy Award for Best Documentary Short

Christo and Jeanne-Claude are a married couple who create environmental installation art. Their works include the wrapping of the Reichstag in Berlin and the Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, the 24-mile-long curtain called Running Fence in Marin and Sonoma counties in California, and most recently The Gates in New York City's Central Park.

Although their work is visually impressive and often controversial, the artists have repeatedly denied that their projects contain any deeper meaning than their immediate aesthetic. The purpose of their art, they contend, is simply to make the world a "more beautiful place" or to create new ways of seeing familiar landscapes. Art critic David Bourdon has described Christo's wrappings as a "revelation through concealment."

At the end of 1970 Christo and Jeanne-Claude began the preparations for the Valley Curtain project. A 400-meter long cloth was stretched across Rifle Gap, a valley in the Rocky Mountains near Rifle, Colorado. The project was complicated due to protests by environmentalists, and with raising the planned budget of $230,000. The project required 14,000 m2 of cloth to be hung on steel cable, fastened with iron bars fixed in concrete on each slope, and 200 tons of concrete had to be carried by hand in buckets up each slope.

The budget increased to $400,000 causing Christo and Jeanne-Claude additional problems with the financing. Finally enough works of art were sold to raise the money and, on October 10, 1971, the orange-coloured curtain was ready for hanging, but was torn to shreds by wind and rock. In August the second attempt to hang the cloth succeeded, but only 28 hours later it had to be taken down because of an approaching storm.
 

Part 1:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuHYC-FXVbg

Part 2:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrPQSf4HhjM&feature=related

Part 3:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqUwmRJILr0&feature=related

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