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Art by Medium: Resin

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Style: Contemporary
Medium: Resin
The Enigmatic Journey of Ninjacat : White Stealthy Whiskers
Located in PARIS, FR
2022, edition of 8 resin fiberglass painted & varnished 23 3/5 × 31 1/2 × 19 7/10 in - 60 × 80 × 50 cm The artwork is signed by the Artist , carved with edition number and date under the artwork The artwork come accompanied with a formal Certificate of Authenticity issued by the studio of the Artist and signed by the Artist serie "Martial Felines Trilogy" In the heart of Tokyo, where modernity meets tradition in a harmonious dance, the enigmatic artist Hiro Ando unveiled a trilogy of sculptures that captivated the art world's imagination—the "Martial Felines Trilogy." This series, comprised of the mesmerizing sculptures "Ninjacat," "Shoguncat," and "Kungfucat," wove a tale of feline prowess and martial arts mastery. In the crowded streets of Akihabara, where the hum of neon lights mingles with the echoes of ancient samurai legends, Hiro Ando found inspiration. His journey began with a fascination for the duality inherent in Japanese culture—the delicate artistry of the past colliding with the high-energy pulse of contemporary urban life. And so, the "Martial Felines Trilogy" was born. The first sculpture, "Ninjacat," emerged from the shadows, a sleek and silent sentinel of the night. With its sharp angles and stealthy posture, Ninjacat embodied the essence of a ninja warrior. Intricately carved from ebony-hued materials, the sculpture's eyes gleamed with an otherworldly intensity, reflecting the cunning and agility of its namesake. As the moon cast its glow over the city, "Shoguncat" stepped into the spotlight. Clad in ornate armor that mirrored the grandeur of ancient warriors, Shoguncat stood tall and proud. The fine details in the sculpture, from the meticulously crafted armor plates...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Deer
Located in Porto, 13
Deer The deer, one of the largest wild animals, epitomises lifeblood as it sheds its antlers in spring before they grow back a few days later. The forest king's muscular and multi-fa...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Walking Bear
Located in Porto, 13
Walking Bear With his mouth and pricked-up ears, Richard Orlinski's walking bear seems to move smoothly and confindently. The animal's curves contrast with the edgy facets.
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

On a Golden Cloud
Located in Miami, FL
My intense passion and extreme love of life is the foundation of my creativity. Elation, contentment and ultimate satisfaction are the feelings I experience when reaching the comp...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Gold Leaf

Hudson River - Early Morning Fog: mixed media work of art
Located in New York, NY
A mixed media work of art by contemporary artist Carla Goldberg. The artwork is a part of the series based on Goldberg's childhood memory of sea foam on beaches and water surface. T...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Enamel

Shoguncat's Noble Stance : Red Regal Vigor
Located in PARIS, FR
2022, edition of 8 resin fiberglass painted & varnished 23 3/5 × 11 4/5 × 11 4/5 in - 60 × 30 × 30 cm The artwork is signed by the Artist , carved with edition number and date under the artwork The artwork come accompanied with a formal Certificate of Authenticity issued by the studio of the Artist and signed by the Artist serie "Martial Felines Trilogy" In the heart of Tokyo, where modernity meets tradition in a harmonious dance, the enigmatic artist Hiro Ando unveiled a trilogy of sculptures that captivated the art world's imagination—the "Martial Felines Trilogy." This series, comprised of the mesmerizing sculptures "Ninjacat," "Shoguncat," and "Kungfucat," wove a tale of feline prowess and martial arts mastery. In the crowded streets of Akihabara, where the hum of neon lights mingles with the echoes of ancient samurai legends, Hiro Ando found inspiration. His journey began with a fascination for the duality inherent in Japanese culture—the delicate artistry of the past colliding with the high-energy pulse of contemporary urban life. And so, the "Martial Felines Trilogy" was born. The first sculpture, "Ninjacat," emerged from the shadows, a sleek and silent sentinel of the night. With its sharp angles and stealthy posture, Ninjacat embodied the essence of a ninja warrior. Intricately carved from ebony-hued materials, the sculpture's eyes gleamed with an otherworldly intensity, reflecting the cunning and agility of its namesake. As the moon cast its glow over the city, "Shoguncat" stepped into the spotlight. Clad in ornate armor that mirrored the grandeur of ancient warriors, Shoguncat stood tall and proud. The fine details in the sculpture, from the meticulously crafted armor plates...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Panda
Located in Porto, 13
The panda by Richard Orlinski features sharp facets yet its round ears, nose and stomach take centre stage. These facets create pools of light and dark that ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Hopeful (19/35) - Yellow Figurative Sculpture with Glossy Green Balloon
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Nayla Saroufim creates glossy balloon sculptures for display on a table or hanging on a wall or ceiling that challenge the traditional notion of the passive viewer. Saroufim's art is a rich mix of media. She was always captivated by the dialogue between painting, illustration, and graphics. Her work embodies her attraction to colors and interest in all forms of expression, especially installations. Her technique is unique and personalized: a fusion of mixed media and installations in layers of steel, copper, paint, and other elements. Saroufim strives to make her positivity and love of happiness appear in her art, sparking emotion and thoughts in viewers. This sculpture measures 26-inches high by 12-inches wide and has an 8-inch wide steel base. It is signed and dated underneath the base of the artwork. This sculpture is numbered 19 out of 35. This sculpture can be displayed easily on any flat surface and may be viewed from any vantage point. Free local Los Angeles delivery. Affordable Continental U.S. and International shipping are available. A certificate of authenticity issued by the art gallery is included. Nayla Saroufim was born in Beirut, Lebanon in 1982. She graduated from the Académie Lebanese des Beaux-Arts with a degree in Illustration and Art Direction. While working in the publicity field at several multinational advertising agencies, Saroufim began rekindling her interest in art. Creative, a dreamer, and a lover of color and beauty, Saroufim has been engaging in a creative expression of her personality through art for over a decade. She hopes that by looking at her art, people will realize that there is beauty and happiness in the simplest things. Nayla Saroufim’s work has graced the walls of solo exhibitions including a show in London in December 2015 and one in Beirut in October 2013. Her work has been exhibited at the Beirut Art Fair, in Singapore, and at Asia Contemporary Art. Artspace Warehouse Los Angeles has exhibited her sculptural artworks since 2020. REPRESENTATION Artspace Warehouse, Los Angeles, California, USA EXHIBITIONS 2023 LA Art Show, Los Angeles, California, USA Affordable Art Fair Battersea, London, UK Affordable Art Fair NYC, New York 2022 Affordable Art Fair Battersea, London, UK Affordable Art Fair NYC, New York 2021 Affordable Art Fair Battersea, London, UK Design week Marbella, Marbella, Spain, Curator Galería Javier Roman Affordable Art Fair New York Beirut rise from the ashes, La Biennale de Venice, Italy Affordable Art Fair NYC, New York Josephine Clavel Gallery, London, UK 2020 Artsfemin, Gstaad, Switzerland Dessine moi un Cedre, Green Cedar Lebanon...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Metal, Steel

Sumo + Barril
Located in Porto, 13
Sumo The sumo wrestler is a symbol of power and spirituality seen as a messenger from the gods in Japan. He throws an oil drum countering spiritual power and industrial power to ask ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Wild Kong
Located in Porto, 13
Wild Kong is a signature Richard Orlinski piece. It declares itself invincible with its open mouth and fearsome teeth as it beats its chest qith mighty fists...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Sake of the Song
Located in Napa, CA
Robert Mars’ graphic compositions and rich colors provide an ideal medium in which to explore his fascination with the Golden Age of American popular culture and the icons of the 1950’s and 60’s. Drawing inspiration from the near-mythical fame that surrounded celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe or Audrey Hepburn before the instant and all-encompassing presence of the internet, Mars’ daring approach creates paintings with a nostalgic yet innovative vintage quality. Mars begins by defining borders and background planes of color with sheets of brown paper and then proceeds to layer paint and vintage paper ephemera. He selectively sands segments of the layers, allowing specific portions of the underpainting to shine through, creating the sensation that the viewer is getting glimpses through a window into the Golden Age of America. By incorporating actual pieces of print from the eras he so adores and sealing it all under shining, impenetrable resin, Mars’s artworks transform into physical remembrances of a period in America’s past so loved and idolized, yet will forever remain trapped in history. A graduate of Parsons School of Design in New York, his artwork was selected for the Absolut Vodka Blank campaign alongside Damien Hirst, and his largest sized piece to date was acquired by Philip Morris/Altria for their corporate headquarters in Virginia. In 2015 Mars was chosen for the cover of Neiman Marcus’ May Book, while CocaCola purchased several existing works and ordered commissions for a world tour celebrating the 100-year anniversary of their trademark bottle shape, in which his artwork was spotlighted. Mars is a featured artist for a custom high end wallpaper and tile series...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Mixed Media, Panel

Cobra
Located in Porto, 13
Cobra The deadliest snake has been worshipped for millenia. Its elegant undulations and dangerous venom fascinated the Egyptians, Hindus and Buddhists...among others. Richard Orlinsk...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Back to Okiya : An Ivory Silent Ballet
Located in PARIS, FR
2022, 8 ed Resin painted and varnished 66 9/10 × 33 1/2 × 11 4/5 in - 170 × 85 × 30 cm The artwork is signed by the Artist , carved with edition number and date back of the artwork T...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Keith Haring Bearbrick 400% set of 2 works (Haring BE@RBRICK)
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Keith Haring Bearbrick 400% (set of 2 works): Unique, timeless collectibles trademarked & licensed by the Estate of Keith Haring. This Bearbrick set reveals Keith Haring's iconic art...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Vinyl, Resin

Dragoon
Located in Porto, 13
Dragoon The kindly yet scary-looking dragon by Richard Orlinski is rooted in Chinese folklore. It has a crest on the top of its head so it can fly and master the wind and rain. It sy...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Made You Look
Located in Napa, CA
Robert Mars’ graphic compositions and rich colors provide an ideal medium in which to explore his fascination with the Golden Age of American popular culture and the icons of the 1950’s and 60’s. Drawing inspiration from the near-mythical fame that surrounded celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe or Audrey Hepburn before the instant and all-encompassing presence of the internet, Mars’ daring approach creates paintings with a nostalgic yet innovative vintage quality. Mars begins by defining borders and background planes of color with sheets of brown paper and then proceeds to layer paint and vintage paper ephemera. He selectively sands segments of the layers, allowing specific portions of the underpainting to shine through, creating the sensation that the viewer is getting glimpses through a window into the Golden Age of America. By incorporating actual pieces of print from the eras he so adores and sealing it all under shining, impenetrable resin, Mars’s artworks transform into physical remembrances of a period in America’s past so loved and idolized, yet will forever remain trapped in history. A graduate of Parsons School of Design in New York, his artwork was selected for the Absolut Vodka Blank campaign alongside Damien Hirst, and his largest sized piece to date was acquired by Philip Morris/Altria for their corporate headquarters in Virginia. In 2015 Mars was chosen for the cover of Neiman Marcus’ May Book, while CocaCola purchased several existing works and ordered commissions for a world tour celebrating the 100-year anniversary of their trademark bottle shape, in which his artwork was spotlighted. Mars is a featured artist for a custom high end wallpaper and tile series...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Mixed Media, Panel

Bull
Located in Porto, 13
Bull This untamed animal symbolises masculine strenght and creative power fuelled by fertile virility. With its horns forward and tail raised, Richard Orlinski's bull is ready to cha...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Falcon
Located in Porto, 13
Falcon With its stocky body, wings outstretched and head tucked into its shoulders, Richard Orlinski's falcon radiates power and precision. Hypnotised by its stregth and skill, the a...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Jeans
Located in Porto, 13
Jeans The symbol of 60s America, jeans are now legends in their own right and have become a must in internacional fashion. Synonumous with liberty, youth and provocation, an object o...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Elephant
Located in Porto, 13
Elephant Standing solidly on its feet, Richard Orlinski's elephant embodies strength and stability with its massive body, ears unfurled, trunk and tuks proudly raised.
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

"Coral Skull" Sculpture
Located in Denver, CO
Dana Younger's (US based) "Coral Skull" is an original, handmade sculpture that depicts yellow, blue, and red coral emerging from a human skull. About t...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Bronze

Crocodile
Located in Porto, 13
Crocodile The crocodile was the first piece Richard Orlinski made. The artist is fascinated by its ability to survive having withstood natural disasters and glaciations. Man and cro...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Buddha
Located in Porto, 13
Buddha In resolutely contemporary materials and colours, Richard Orlinski's Buddha represents religious freedom and diversity in the 21th century. Throught this sculpture, the artist...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Stiletto
Located in Porto, 13
Stiletto An oversized stiletto heel to match the desire it sparks...This sharp heel alludes to the stiletto, a fearsome dagger that inflicts precise and deep wounds. To whom does thi...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

"That's the Way " Colorful Stripe Painting by Gian Garofalo
By Gian Garofalo
Located in Greenwich, CT
Gian Garofalo was born in Chicago, Illinois, where he currently lives and works. He is a multi-disciplinary artist recognized for his design concepts and...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Wood Panel, Pigment

Crocodile
Located in Porto, 13
Crocodile The crocodile was the first piece Richard Orlinski made. The artist is fascinated by its ability to survive having withstood natural disasters and glaciations. Man and cro...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

The Lovers
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Untitled
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

A street corner
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Extrapolation 2
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Pen Blow Purple Horizon, Square Abstract Landscape Resin Painting in Pink, Blue
Located in Kent, CT
In this square painting in ballpoint pen and resin on panel, the artist's unique ballpoint ink process creates undulating, layered striations of bright pink, blue, green, violet and yellow...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Panel, Ballpoint Pen

Trilogy Samuraicat Blu, Sumocat Orange, Urbancat Pink : Feline Odyssey
Located in PARIS, FR
2015, Unique Artwork resin and pigments polychrome on fiberglass under protective plexiglass cap with LED 12 1/5 × 31 1/2 × 13 in - 31 × 80 × 33 cm The artwork is signed by the Artis...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Plexiglass, Pigment, LED Light, Resin

Extrapolation 1
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Julia
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Mechanical balcony
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Trilogy Robotcat Pink, Warriorcat Orange, Urbancat Yellow : Triad of Whiskers
Located in PARIS, FR
2015, Unique Artwork resin and pigments polychrome on fiberglass under protective plexiglass cap with LED 12 1/5 × 31 1/2 × 13 in - 31 × 80 × 33 cm The artwork is signed by the Artis...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Plexiglass, Resin, LED Light, Pigment

Sans un Doute
Located in Porto, 13
Fueled by themes of conspicuous consumption, luxury brands, and constructed identities, Fred Allard casts high fashion shopping bags filled with soda cans ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Metal

Extrapolation 6
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

A Second Breath
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Untitled
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Unbreakables (Diptych)
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Extrapolation 7
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

The suitor
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Doum
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Extrapolation 4
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In Extrapolations, Lachapelle extracts seemingly mundane mechanical objects from a typical cityscape – such as radiators, fire hydrants, and balconies – and manipulates their appearance by creating 3D printed models that visually oscillate between the magical and the monstrous. In some of his sculptures, Lachapelle uses photogrammetry – a method that scans a series of two-dimensional photographs or images to create three-dimensional models. While photogrammetry typically enables real-life objects to be accurately reproduced, the artist challenges this paradigm by tampering with the machine’s process, both by accepting the machine’s glitches and by triggering them. When scanning images, the results may not always be what is anticipated, however, for Lachapelle it is about welcoming the unknown. In several examples, he encourages the program to read screenshots of images and extrapolates what should be there, filling in blank data with added images and various shapes. The resulting sculptures are symmetrical and geometric, appearing uncannily familiar like human vertebrae, yet unfamiliar in fantastical abstracted forms. The sculptures merge between two different worlds, bridging human and machine through unexpected adaptations to everyday things. Extrapolations balances between this duality, ultimately reflecting on the increasing dependency humans have on technology in our everyday world. For Lachapelle, this is especially pertinent in a world where technology is continuously developing. The sculptures highlight the dynamic and everchanging relationship between humans and technology, making us question this reliance on technology. In this exhibition, Lachapelle also introduces the inclusion of human characters back into his art practice. He places people in unnatural and impossible exchanges with machines and technology. For instance, while in past exhibitions, he has usually tried to conceal the electronic components that make moving pieces...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

St-Laurent
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Extrapolation 5
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

The suitor
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

Dom
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s work combines the real and the imaginary to create miniature environments and scenarios that showcase connections between humans and their everyday worlds. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Paint, Resin

MAN RISING UP - Contemporary Realism / Figurative Male / Mixed Media Resin
Located in New York, NY
Original Mixed Media Piece by Eric Zener
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Mixed Media

Yayoi Kusama, Pumpkin Cast Resin Figure - Red, 2019
Located in London, GB
Yayoi Kusama, Pumpkin Cast Resin Figure - Red, 2019 The nine decades of Yayoi Kusama's life have taken her from rural Japan to the New York art scene to contemporary Tokyo, in a car...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Lacquer, Paint

Lion
Located in Porto, 13
Lion Hundreds of facets come together to depict it's thick mane and space themselves out to give it a slender silhoutte. The lion embodies power and justicem is the king of the beas...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Trilogy Robotcat Orange, Sumocat Blu, Urbancat Yellow : Feline Metropolis
Located in PARIS, FR
2015, Unique Artwork resin and pigments polychrome on fiberglass under protective plexiglass cap with LED 12 1/5 × 31 1/2 × 13 in - 31 × 80 × 33 cm The artwork is signed by the Artis...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Plexiglass, LED Light, Pigment

Come Play With Me - dog, sculpture, ball, animal, figurine, women, sculpture
Located in London, GB
'Come Play With Me' Bronze Resin sculpture by artist Sara Ingleby-Mackenzie Currently based in Frome, Somerset, Sara Ingleby-Mackenzie graduated wit...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Stone, Bronze

Crocodile
Located in Porto, 13
Crocodile The crocodile was the first piece Richard Orlinski made. The artist is fascinated by its ability to survive having withstood natural disasters and glaciations. Man and cro...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

Trilogy Urbancat, Sumocat, Robotcat Blu : Azure Chronicles
Located in PARIS, FR
2015, Unique Artwork resin and pigments polychrome on fiberglass under protective plexiglass cap with LED 12 1/5 × 31 1/2 × 13 in - 31 × 80 × 33 cm The artwork is signed by the Artis...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Plexiglass, LED Light, Pigment

Bernard Rives Golf Silver Swing original resin sculpture
Located in CORAL GABLES - MIAMI, FL
Swing. Stainless steel and chromed resin New construction and Perfect condition Limited Edition 8 copies + 4 H.C. Bernard Rives was born 1947 in Carcassonne (France). He studied i...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin

KAWS Companion 2016 (KAWS Flayed)
By KAWS
Located in NEW YORK, NY
KAWS Blush Flayed Companion 2016: New and sealed in its original packaging. Published by Medicom Japan in conjunction with the exhibition, KAWS: Where The End Starts at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. ThIs figurine has since sold out. Medium: Vinyl paint, cast resin. Year: 2016. Dimensions: 11 × 5 × 3 in (27.9 × 12.7 × 7.6 cm). New in original packaging; never opened. Stamped on the underside of foot from a sold out edition of unknown. Shipped securely from New York. We are a leading seller in this category, also specializing in Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, Andy Warhol & more. 1stDibs seller since 2016. KAWS is an American graffiti artist and designer known for his toys, paintings, and prints. Born Brian Donnelly on November 4, 1974 in Jersey City, NJ, KAWS graduated with a BFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York and went on to work in animation. “When your whole art is based on the lettering you choose, you kinda figure out what ones work together. I just liked the shapes of the k, a, w, s,” he explained of his moniker. Having started as a graffiti artist in New York in the early 1990s, KAWS began reworking advertisements in his distinctive style. Pop Art and culture permeate his cartoonish Companion series of figurines, which bear a resemblance to the works of Takashi Murakami. KAWS worked together with Nike in 2017 to produce an Air Jordan 4...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Resin

Materials

Resin, Vinyl

Resin art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Resin art available on 1stDibs. While artists have worked in this medium across a range of time periods, art made with this material during the 21st Century is especially popular. If you’re looking to add art created with this material to introduce a provocative pop of color and texture to an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue, red, purple, orange and other colors. There are many well-known artists whose body of work includes ceramic sculptures. Popular artists on 1stDibs associated with pieces like this include KAWS, Nemo Jantzen, Richard Orlinski, and Franco DeFrancesca. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Abstract, all of these pieces for sale are unique and many will draw the attention of guests in your home. Not every interior allows for large Resin art, so small editions measuring 0.01 inches across are also available

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