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Wendy Mark
Large Dice

2014

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Corpheum XVIII - large, geometric, abstract, corten steel outdoor sculpture
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This striking blackened corten steel sculpture was created by Claude Millette. Four elegantly curved columns of steel are joined at various angles and appear to float in mid-air. The...
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Cobalt Glass Vase with "Lily Pad" Pattern
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Broken Heart
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This piece is entitled Broken Heart. It is a large scale outdoor sculpture. The crystalline art resin. It is purposely cracked using a chemical reaction. Then O'Reilly uses bronze staples to mend the heart. He is referencing Kintsugi, a Japanese philosophy, that aims to celebrate the beauty of cracks by highlight them rather than hiding them. O'Reilly is referencing the ups and downs of the human condition. Patrick O’Reilly...
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Heartfelt
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Located in Belfast, GB
This piece is entitled Heartfelt. It is a large scale outdoor sculpture. The bronze hand holds up a beautiful cracked heart. The crystalline art resin is purposely cracked using a ch...
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2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

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Tall Sculpture in Aluminum by Jacques Jarrige “Angel #18”
By Jacques Jarrige
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A tall sculpture by Jacques Jarrige. Formed with a strip of aluminum, split and hand hammered the sculpture retains the gesture of the sculptor. Set in an oak base.
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2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

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Script: Column 9
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Born in Pasadena and raised in Orange County, Elizabeth Turk earned her M.F.A. at the Rinehart School of Sculpture, Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. In Turk’s work, the shape of the line is created by extreme loss. That is, the reductive process of carving creates a positive, fragile form in which the absence of the original material is a focus. Turk encourages us to consider how nature has shaped these organic materials long before the artist’s manipulation of them into new forms. When viewed as components in a complex natural system, their singular beauty and inherent mystery is revealed. Turk compels us to view works of art not only as objects to be coveted and collected, but also as expressions of the natural world and our evolving relation to it. A recipient of numerous awards, including a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (2010), a Barnett and Annalee Newman Foundation Fellowship (2010), and a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship (2011), Turk is internationally recognized for transforming her signature medium of marble into strikingly intricate objects that defy convention and challenge our preconceptions of what marble can do. Through the use of electric grinders, dental tools...
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