This document discusses and provides images of various artists and their works that utilize cardboard, paper, origami and other lightweight materials to create sculptures and designs. It highlights works by David Umemoto, Sebastien Leon Agneessens, Jose Miguel Pino, Nguyen Hung Cuong and Juan Nicholas Elizalde that showcase the potential of these materials for representing both geometric and organic forms through their use of lines, planes and reflective qualities. The document serves to provide examples of how volumetric designs can be achieved using cardboard and other papers.
This document discusses and provides images of various artists and their works that utilize cardboard, paper, origami and other lightweight materials to create sculptures and designs. It highlights works by David Umemoto, Sebastien Leon Agneessens, Jose Miguel Pino, Nguyen Hung Cuong and Juan Nicholas Elizalde that showcase the potential of these materials for representing both geometric and organic forms through their use of lines, planes and reflective qualities. The document serves to provide examples of how volumetric designs can be achieved using cardboard and other papers.
This document discusses and provides images of various artists and their works that utilize cardboard, paper, origami and other lightweight materials to create sculptures and designs. It highlights works by David Umemoto, Sebastien Leon Agneessens, Jose Miguel Pino, Nguyen Hung Cuong and Juan Nicholas Elizalde that showcase the potential of these materials for representing both geometric and organic forms through their use of lines, planes and reflective qualities. The document serves to provide examples of how volumetric designs can be achieved using cardboard and other papers.
This document discusses and provides images of various artists and their works that utilize cardboard, paper, origami and other lightweight materials to create sculptures and designs. It highlights works by David Umemoto, Sebastien Leon Agneessens, Jose Miguel Pino, Nguyen Hung Cuong and Juan Nicholas Elizalde that showcase the potential of these materials for representing both geometric and organic forms through their use of lines, planes and reflective qualities. The document serves to provide examples of how volumetric designs can be achieved using cardboard and other papers.
Paperwork no.17 concrete, using Paper architectural and planar 2020 elements evocative of Escher or Seussian constructions. I picked his paper series specifically because many of them include dotted lines alluding to the net he used. https://davidumemoto.com/ paperwork-no-17
Sculpture Design: This design uses
Sebastien Leon geometric forms to allude Agneessens to an organic, serpentine Sculpture Design form. Both the reflective Consultation & quality and undulating Fabrication: Situ Studio surface suggest Atwood Sculpture movement. 2011 Plywood armature and aluminum tiles
Jose Miguel Pino Pino is a contemporary
Dardo artist from Spain who Life size metal sculpture works in a range of wood 2020 (Process shot) and metal to make dynamic animal sculptures. I chose this shot for the clear view of the planes of metal. The finished sculpture is painted realistically, but I noted I prefer the natural finishes on most of his sculptures Nguyen Hung Cuong Looking at nets, I began Eagle to think of origami. I stuck Undated on Cuong’s work Origami Paper because he has a YouTube channel as well as designs published in many origami instruction manuals,which were helpful to look at. This eagle design was undated but has been used from as early as 2011 onward.
Juan Nicholas Elizalde Elizalde began creating
Left:Otomops paper portraits of bats in Martiensseni (Free Tailed 2019. He has since made Bat) over 88 bats, and is Right: Lavia Frons cataloging them on a (Yellow-Winged bat) dedicated Instagram From ongoing project page where he posts Amiguitos de la them with their scientific Oscuridad/Little Friends name and other of Darkness information. Photos and 2022 lighting by Fede Lo Bianco.