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Style: Contemporary
Medium: 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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Roots #3 - Jean-Paul Réti, 21st Century, Contemporary metal sculpture
Located in Paris, FR
Wall sculpture
“It has long been known that the Earth is round, but it is only now in the space age that it is really seen to be so. The stunning pictures of the blue planet floatin...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Diablito de pared II" art toy, red devil, pop art, Mexican, contempo, sculpture
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumul...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
Pop Art Playful Luck Elephant (Pink Clear) Christopher Schulz Sculpture
Located in Greenwich, CT
Lucky Elephant (Pink Clear) - Edition of 75.
Christopher Schulz (b. 1974) works in a variety of mediums to create his sculptures and 2D wall pieces, Schul...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
“Traveling Landscape, "Golden Interior” Miniature Landscape in Vintage Case
Located in New York, NY
Kathleen Vance, “Traveling Landscape, "Golden Interior” found case, artificial foliage, resin, paint (12.5”x5”x8”) 2022
Kathleen Vance is an environmental artist who creates sculptures and installations that connect people to local aspects of nature that are overlooked or under-appreciated.
Vance received her B.F.A. from Pratt Institute and her M.F.A. from Hunter College in sculpture. She has received numerous grants and awards for her artwork including: a travel grant to research the geo-thermal regions of Iceland, a grant from the Puffin foundation for public sculpture, a development grant from Aljira, Center for Contemporary Art in conjunction with the Creative Capital Foundation, and a grant from the Brooklyn Arts council which aided the development and implementation of an outdoor community based art project in East New York. Ms. Vance was artist in resident in Berlin, Germany, presenting a workshop on environmental arts in connection with the Grunewald Parks Department in Germany.
Her sculptural installations have been featured at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Jacksonville, the Orlando Museum of Art, the Weatherspoon Art Museum, the Peeler Art Center, the Weisman Art Museum, the Brandywine River Museum of Art, the Bruce Museum, the Ellen Noel Art Museum, Nassauischer Kunstverein Wiesbaden, the Hillwood Art Museum, VOLTA New York, PULSE New York and Miami, and EXPO Chicago, as well as many private and public institutions. Kathleen Vance has exhibited extensively in New York and internationally and continues to live and work in New York.
Kathleen Vance Artist Statement, “Traveling Landscapes”
With the series “Traveling Landscapes” Vance creates miniature landscapes inside vintage suitcases and trunks...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Found Objects
Abstract Men Sculpture Brown Rusted Metal Silver Resin
Located in ALCOY/ALCOI, ES
Tombem-ho
Here some fragments for one of his latest exhibition catalogue
“I think that a work of art should puzzle viewers, make them reflect on the meaning of life” Antoni Tàpies
...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal, Steel
$4,796 Sale Price
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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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
"Tigre vidente" art toy, three eyed tiger, pop art, mexican art, mask, nature
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumultuous gatherings marked by disorder, commotion, and sometimes even quarrels. In the colonial past, mitote was a celebration commemorating the establishment of the New Spain kingdom, blending local pride with imperial solemnity. However, throughout both ancient times and the present day, mitotes serve as rituals embedded in the culture and religiosity of various indigenous groups in Mexico, such as the Nahua, Cora, Tepehuan, and Huichol. Adorned in rich attire, gathered around a fire amidst the sounds of musical instruments, and under the intoxicating influence of alcoholic beverages, mitotes serve as occasions to invoke sacred beings—whether protective deities of nature or Christian saints associated with agriculture—to pray for bountiful harvests. Mitotes encompass and have always embodied rites, myths, and life.
In homage to the artist’s name, this exhibition is presented as a mitote: a celebration displaying the intimate mythologies of its creator through various artistic expressions such as sculpture, artwork, and video. Cosmic Duality is a concept wherein Mr. Mitote delves into memories of his childhood from a contemporary perspective. His mother introduced him at a young age to the traditions and customs of her native Maltrata, Veracruz, a town steeped in the memory of a noble past wherein it fought for its autonomy. Every year on January 1st, to invoke prosperity, the dance of the huehues (meaning “old people” or “elders” in Nahuatl) is performed. According to oral and local traditions, these characters embody foes in a mocked and vanquished manner, dancing beneath the lash of a tiger or devil. Their costumes feature pre-Columbian symbols merged with elements evoking nature, alongside nods to contemporary entertainment culture.
Through the observation and interpretation of nature, numerous ancestral cultures created dual cosmologies. Far from viewing opposites, they conceived of dual complementary systems such as chaos-order, cold-heat, humidity-drought, feminine-masculine, and life-death, among others, to uphold cosmic order. Placed within the context of Mexico City, Mr. Mitote reimagines these enduring principles from ancient religious practices alongside contemporary languages. He does so through vibrant entities that blend tradition and innovation, memory and fantasy, past and present, ancestral ceremonies, and urban rituals. Each artwork serves as a reminder that across all latitudes and human territories, culture thrives, tradition evolves continuously, the past is revitalized, and the present shapes the path forward into the future.
The body has served as the quintessential conduit bridging two dual dimensions: the human and the divine, the earthly and the celestial, the microcosm and the macrocosm. In several of his artworks, Mr. Mitote invokes propitiatory dances, and ritual practices, aimed at attracting abundant rain and fostering good harvests, many of which entail risking the physical well-being and even the lives of participants. The tiger hunt...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
Golden Bull
Located in Miami, FL
"Through my artistic work, I try to highlight the possible parallels between animals and human beings, at the crossroads of humor and mockery."
P. Schumacher
Classically trained, Schumacher further specializes in restoring art antiquities, with a particular interest in Asiatic art...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"Tigre atacando I" art toy, tiger, pop art, Mexican, contemporary, sculpture
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumultuous gatherings marked by disorder, commotion, and sometimes even quarrels. In the colonial past, mitote was a celebration commemorating the establishment of the New Spain kingdom, blending local pride with imperial solemnity. However, throughout both ancient times and the present day, mitotes serve as rituals embedded in the culture and religiosity of various indigenous groups in Mexico, such as the Nahua, Cora, Tepehuan, and Huichol. Adorned in rich attire, gathered around a fire amidst the sounds of musical instruments, and under the intoxicating influence of alcoholic beverages, mitotes serve as occasions to invoke sacred beings—whether protective deities of nature or Christian saints associated with agriculture—to pray for bountiful harvests. Mitotes encompass and have always embodied rites, myths, and life.
In homage to the artist’s name, this exhibition is presented as a mitote: a celebration displaying the intimate mythologies of its creator through various artistic expressions such as sculpture, artwork, and video. Cosmic Duality is a concept wherein Mr. Mitote delves into memories of his childhood from a contemporary perspective. His mother introduced him at a young age to the traditions and customs of her native Maltrata, Veracruz, a town steeped in the memory of a noble past wherein it fought for its autonomy. Every year on January 1st, to invoke prosperity, the dance of the huehues (meaning “old people” or “elders” in Nahuatl) is performed. According to oral and local traditions, these characters embody foes in a mocked and vanquished manner, dancing beneath the lash of a tiger or devil. Their costumes feature pre-Columbian symbols merged with elements evoking nature, alongside nods to contemporary entertainment culture.
Through the observation and interpretation of nature, numerous ancestral cultures created dual cosmologies. Far from viewing opposites, they conceived of dual complementary systems such as chaos-order, cold-heat, humidity-drought, feminine-masculine, and life-death, among others, to uphold cosmic order. Placed within the context of Mexico City, Mr. Mitote reimagines these enduring principles from ancient religious practices alongside contemporary languages. He does so through vibrant entities that blend tradition and innovation, memory and fantasy, past and present, ancestral ceremonies, and urban rituals. Each artwork serves as a reminder that across all latitudes and human territories, culture thrives, tradition evolves continuously, the past is revitalized, and the present shapes the path forward into the future.
The body has served as the quintessential conduit bridging two dual dimensions: the human and the divine, the earthly and the celestial, the microcosm and the macrocosm. In several of his artworks, Mr. Mitote invokes propitiatory dances, and ritual practices, aimed at attracting abundant rain and fostering good harvests, many of which entail risking the physical well-being and even the lives of participants. The tiger hunt...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
Latimer's Walk
Located in Three Oaks, MI
"I am influenced and gain insights through the exploration of artists and authors who consider the land and our place within it. This information along with my own investigations, re...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Bigfoot XS
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Bigfoot" is a part of Idan Zareski's ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Wall Sculpture "Buddies" Cowboys in Sunset
Located in New York, NY
65” x 35” x 4" resin, metal- signed on reverse by the artist. This wall sculpture depicts two cowboys riding horses against a vibrant red arc of the setting sun. The contour of the...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal
Arabesques Horse - Blue & White Resin sculpture
Located in Miami, FL
Arabesques Horse is a resin sculpture made by Patrick Schumacher, a French contemporary artist. This white Horse sculpture with blue "arabesques...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"La línea rosa" figurative animal sculpture, translucid resin, pink, surrealist
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
The artwork of Alejandra España is an invitation to her intimate cosmogony. In it, she displays modules to give meaning to the observer through the configuration of maps or cartograp...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Atlantis Egg "Zen"
Located in Miami, FL
Atlantis Egg "Zen" is a resin sculpture made by Patrice Breteau, a French contemporary artist. This piece is available in eight different colors, all resistant to UV exposure and out...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Contemporary Wall Sculpture "Prize Bull"
Located in New York, NY
37" x 26" x 4", resin, vinyl
This wall hanging sculpture depicts three cowboys standing with a prize bull. The surface is cast in a deep midnight blue and b...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Babyfoot 35
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Babyfoot" is a part of Idan Zareski's...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"Diablito 1" art toy, red devil, pop art, Mexican, mask, contemporary, sculpture
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumul...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
"Tigre III" art toy, smiling jaguar, pop art, mexican art, mask, nature
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumul...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
"Fragmentación" art toy, tiger, pop art, Mexican, contemporary, sculpture, 4 pzs
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
A piece from the exhibition "Cosmic Duality" by artist Mr. Mitote.
Mitote is a term we use today to describe a lively, noisy, and excessive gathering. It’s also used to depict tumul...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint, Spray Paint, Acrylic
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Babyfoot XS
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Babyfoot" is a part of Idan Zareski's...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Babyfoot 35
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Babyfoot" is a part of Idan Zareski's...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
La Nena XS
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"La nena" is a part of Idan Zareski's ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"En el sueño la vigilia" Dreamscape, nature, snail, bronze branches installation
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
Life can be scary, fast, and discordant. Adulthood, the compilation of myriad experiences, can bury youthful dreams. Alejandra España resists this dark potential, using a common, joy...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Black Water
Located in New York, NY
73” x 40” x 2” variable dimensions (resin, metal)
In Philip Simmons' series of sculpture made of resin, metal, and vinyl, he references pop sources and the news media to comment o...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal
"Tururu" figurative animal sculpture, translucid resin, purple
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
These playful translucid resin sculptures show the artist's constant contact with her imagination, dreams, and nature. Alejandra imagines these beings as if they co-exist with us but...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Unnamed
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Nicholas Crombach graduated from OCAD University’s Sculpture and Installation program in 2012. He has been awarded the Hayden Davies Memorial Award, Samuel Lazar Kagan Award, Abraham...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
"Subibaja" figurative, object and animal sculpture, translucid resin, blue
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
The artwork of Alejandra España is an invitation to her intimate cosmogony. In it, she displays modules to give meaning to the observer through the co...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"Ser ahí" - figurative sculpture, translucid resin, yellow, surrealist form
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
The artwork of Alejandra España is an invitation to her intimate cosmogony. In it, she displays modules to give meaning to the observer through the configuration of maps or cartograp...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Squirrel Skin
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Nicholas Crombach has a BFA from OCAD University with a major in Sculpture and Installation. In 2016-17 he participated in a year-long studio residency at The Florence Trust in Londo...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Sculpture of Hand: 'Petite main reliquaire 2'
Located in New York, NY
‘I have created characters since I was a child.
I studied painting at the Ecole des Beaux Arts de Paris, but now I have a preference for sculpture.
I do not have an intellectual proc...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Brass
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
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 Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Paint
Le Siffleur 85
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Le Sifflleur" is a part of Idan Zares...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Le Siffleur 50 Gold Edition
Located in Porto, 13
This striking piece, known for its bold red finish and lifelike detail, exemplifies Zareski's unique artistic vision and mastery in sculpture.
"Le Sifflleur" is a part of Idan Zares...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
"Ciervo" - figurative animal sculpture, translucid resin, blue deer
Located in Ciudad de México, MX
The artwork of Alejandra España is an invitation to her intimate cosmogony. In it, she displays modules to give meaning to the observer through the co...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Pop Art Playful Luck Elephant (Aqua Faux Leather) Christopher Schulz Sculpture
Located in Greenwich, CT
Lucky Elephant (blue) - Artist Proof of 4
Christopher Schulz (b. 1974) works in a variety of mediums to create his sculptures and 2D wall pieces, Schulz seeks to engage the viewer i...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Predator, Prey & Victim
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Nicholas Crombach is currently an artist in residence at The Florence Trust in London, UK. Crombach graduated from OCAD University’s Sculpture and Installation program in 2012. He h...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Animal Skin, Resin, Acrylic
"03:03" Bronze Sculpture 76" x 71" x 30" inch Edition of 8 by Huang Yulong
By Huang Yulong
Located in Culver City, CA
"03:03" Bronze Sculpture 76" x 71" x 30" inch Edition of 8 by Huang Yulong
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Huang Yulong was born in 1983 in Anhui Province, China. In 2007 he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture from the Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute in Jiangxi Province. As one of the new generation of Chinese artists and part of the ‘post-80s generation’ and ‘only child’ generation, Huang is strongly influenced by the phenomenon of foreign culture in China, which he combines with his fascination with pottery and the material world. Huang is best known for his sculptures of Buddhas in hoodies, displaying an exchange of Eastern tradition and Western contemporary style. He was selected by “Complex” as “25 Contemporary Chinese Artists You Need to Know” in 2013. His sculptures have been exhibited at Niubi Newbie Kids II, at Schoeni Gallery, Hong Kong; “Zeitgeist” Huang Yulong’s Solo Exhibition at Himalayas Art Museum, Shanghai, China; Chinese Artist / Marseille Artist at Marseilles, France; The 4th International Contemporary Art Exhibition at Gwangju Biennale Korea, Art Beijing Art...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Concrete
Milou, Snowy, Milu, スノーウィ
Located in New Orleans, LA
Thierry Job was born in Marseille, France and currently lives in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He studied art at the School of Beaux Arts in Paris. His wo...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Steel, Gold Leaf
Price Upon Request
AI, Eliza, for $79.99 per year I Love You
Located in New Orleans, LA
Thierry Job was born in Marseille, France and currently lives in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He studied art at the School of Beaux Arts in Paris. His wo...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Steel, Gold Leaf
Price Upon Request
Are We Alone in the Universe?
Located in New Orleans, LA
Thierry Job was born in Marseille, France and currently lives in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He studied art at the School of Beaux Arts in Paris. His wo...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Silver, Steel
Price Upon Request
Lider Maximo
Located in New Orleans, LA
Thierry Job was born in Marseille, France and currently lives in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He studied art at the School of Beaux Arts in Paris. His wo...
Category
2010s Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Steel
Price Upon Request
Perseverance
Located in Chicago, IL
Perseverance
Oil on Resin with 24K Gold Leaf Cap
35” x 12” x 12”
Edition: 1/8
Carole A. Feuerman (born 1945) is an American sculptor and author working in Hyperrealism. She is o...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Gold Leaf
Price Upon Request
Serena by Carole Feuerman - Swimmer Sculpture
Located in Chicago, IL
Serena
Resin, Laquer, 24K Gold Leaf Cap
8" x 17" x 9
Carole A. Feuerman (born 1945) is an American sculptor and author working in Hyperrealism. She is one of the three artists ...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Resin Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Price Upon Request
Resin figurative sculptures for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Resin figurative sculptures 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 figurative sculptures 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, pink 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, Richard Orlinski, after Jean-Michel Basquiat, and (after) Keith Haring. Frequently made by artists working in the Pop Art, Contemporary, 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 figurative sculptures, so small editions measuring 0.4 inches across are also available