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Medium: Nylon
Sinuosity 131 rose gold (pop slick metallic smooth small table topsculpture art
Located in Quebec, Quebec
keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculpture, angular, process-oriented...
Category

2010s Pop Art Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity mini in Black Cherry (pop art metallic smooth small sculpture abstract
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Mini. Black Cherry Metallic keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculptu...
Category

2010s Pop Art Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinosity in absynthe (wall mount green art pop design smooth sculpture abstract)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Wall mount or pedestal mount. Absinthe metallic finish. 20"x16"x8" keywords; sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled an...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Paper Quilt #11 (Quirky Hand-stitched Abstract Mini Wall Sculpture)
Located in Hudson, NY
4 x 10 x 2 inches paper, pigmented beeswax (encaustic), nylon thread Small paper wall sculptures that are hand painted with encaustic and hand stitched to form tiny boxes...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Encaustic, Archival Paper

Sinosity petite in Aqua (pop art teal metallic smooth slick sculpture abstract)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Mid sized. Aqua Metallic. keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculptur...
Category

2010s Pop Art Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity in chiffon metallique (pop sculpture minimalist curvy white textile)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Sinuosity sculpture. Pedestal mount. No wall mount available. Chiffon metallic finish. keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common material...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity in mid blue (wall sculpture minimalist classic blue curvy art pedestal
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Sinuosity sculpture. Wall mount or pedestal mount. Mid Blue metallic finish. 21"x18"x7" keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common material...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity in Hot Pink (fushia pop sculpture minimalist curvy white textile)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Sinuosity sculpture. Wall hanging in any direction, 360 degrees or pedestal mount. Hot Pink metallic finish keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, u...
Category

2010s Pop Art Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Pelt 4
Located in Montreal, Quebec
ngrid Bachmann has presented her multidisciplinary work nationally and internationally in exhibitions and festivals in Belgium, the U.S., Estonia, Singapore, Peru, Brazil, the UK, an...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Mixed Media

Sinuosity petite in Purple (pop metallic art sculpture biomorphic slick art)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Mid sized. Purple Metallic. 11x9x6 keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Centaure (large)
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Sinuosity in gold fish orange (table sculpture minimalist monochrome curvy art
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Pedestal mount. No wall mount available. Goldfish orange metallic finish. 24"x19"x11". keywords; sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity in black cherry (pedestal sculpture minimalist monochrome brown curvy
Located in Quebec, Quebec
Sinuosity sculpture. Pedestal mount. No wall mount available. Black Cherry metallic finish. 24"x22"x12" keywords; sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of ...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Ecofact 3
Located in Montreal, Quebec
When Laurent Lamarche reflects on the concept of origin, he thinks in terms of traces. His vision goes at once forward and backward, knitting together yesterday and tomorrow – thus e...
Category

2010s Abstract Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Le penseur
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Untitled
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models – which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology – shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle’s work – for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness – these are the artist’s references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa – Centre d’Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Acrylic

Évasion 3
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Paint

"Strong and Beautiful", fabric, torso, handwoven, turquoise, sculpture
Located in Natick, MA
"Strong and Beautiful" by Sylvia Vander Sluis is a 19 x 14 x 6 inch fiber sculpture of handwoven, dusky-turquoise fabric with an iridescent sheen. Part of the "Torso...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Polyester, Nylon, Fabric, Mesh

MIRROR - Contemporary - Geometric Abstract w/ Repurposed Construction Material
Located in Signal Mountain, TN
"Mirror" is a site specific installation that was exhibited in the show "Dialects of Place(s) by Land Report Collective at COOP Gallery in Nashville, TN. In this piece, Jobe uses industrial materials such as insulation foam, concrete, window screen, and graphite tracing paper to create a patterned structure that protrudes from the corner and carries the viewer's eye upward. At the bottom of the piece, we see delicately balanced concrete on top of pale blue insulation foam. The patterned concrete and insulation foam carries the viewer's eye upwards towards another pop of blue on top of the aluminum window screen frame. The screen gives the viewer a window in which to look through the piece. On one side, this mesh frames the graphite paper and on the other side the viewer can see the patterned concrete and insulation foam. Review from "The Rib" about "Mirror" One of the more surprising works here is Nashville-based Brian Jobe...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Prototype pour un effort collectif
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models – which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology – shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle’s work – for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness – these are the artist’s references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa – Centre d’Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Centaure
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Paper Quilt #8 (Playful Contemporary Abstract Paper Wall Sculpture with Dots)
Located in Hudson, NY
10 x 5 x 2 inches paper, pigmented beeswax (encaustic), nylon thread Small paper wall sculptures that are hand painted with encaustic and hand stitched to form tiny boxes...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Encaustic, Archival Paper

Obsolescence
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Sinuosity in chiffon (wall sculpture minimalist monochrome curvy white textile)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculpture, angular, process-oriented...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Ecofact 2
Located in Montreal, Quebec
When Laurent Lamarche reflects on the concept of origin, he thinks in terms of traces. His vision goes at once forward and backward, knitting together yesterday and tomorrow – thus e...
Category

2010s Abstract Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Sinuosity petite in amethyst (curvy, small sculpture, biomorphic, purple art)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
*Please inquire for commissions of any other size, color or surface rendering keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, crease...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Sinuosity in blutonium (wall sculpture minimalist classic blue curvy art)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculpture, angular, process-oriented...
Category

2010s Minimalist Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Fetch
Located in Montreal, Quebec
In his recent works sculptor Nicholas Crombach uses the markers of tradition to critique social rituals. Through the employment of the mythology and the rich visual culture of the hunt, Crombach assembles works which revel in contradiction. He has created a series of unexpected juxtapositions that examine the cultural significance and the complex issues percolating around hunting and sporting traditions in the 21st century. For this exhibition, Crombach riffs off the myth of Diana and Actaeon, which provides a poignant framework for his theme. In the original story, Actaeon, the hunter and grandson of King Cadmus, is in the forest with his dogs, when he spies Artemis (Diana) in her bath attended by her nymphs. Diana was the goddess of the hunt, but when the mortal Actaeon sees her, her nymphs try to cover her modesty. She splashes him with water, turning him from a mortal man into a stag, who flees into the forest only to be hunted down and killed by his own dogs. The hunter becomes the hunted. Crombach’s Fetch (2018) refers to the mythology of Diana and Actaeon as he transforms the lofty and classical story of metamorphoses into a game of fetch in the local park, constructed on a grand scale. In Fetch (2018), Crombach creates a hybrid between the art historical imagery from paintings of hounds hunting stags with the flashy colours and synthetic materials of modern day dog chew toys. The sculpture is displayed alongside a variety of chew toys that act as an index for the sculptures interpretation, some transformed into porcelain that has been marked with the aristocratic hunting motifs found on antique English pottery. Here, the assembly of works create a conversation on the blurred boundaries between: histories of domestication, the working relationships we have with animals, contemporary issues of hunting as “play”, tradition and survival. A second major new sculpture “End of the Chase” is a collapsed version of a Victorian period rocking horse housed in London’s V&A Museum Of Childhood. The sculpture responds to the 2014 hunting act that passed in Britain which in turn attempts to obliterate the tradition of hunting with hounds, most commonly associated with the fox hunt...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Acrylic, Polyurethane, Nylon, Resin

Sinuosity mini in bubblegum (pink, pastel, soft, curvy, small sculpture, smooth)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
*Please inquire for commissions of any other size, color or surface rendering keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Attention au bouchon et au cul de la bouteille
Located in Montreal, Quebec
“Humour is the courtesy of despair .” Chris Marker Pierre Laroche’s interest delves into established codes and symbolic constructions associated with t...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Fabric, Nylon, Glass

Paper Quilt #6 (Brightly Colored Unique Wall Sculpture Stitched w/ Paper & Wax)
Located in Hudson, NY
5 x 9 x 2.5 inches paper, pigmented beeswax (encaustic), nylon thread This paper construction is offered by Carrie Haddad Gallery, located in Hudson, NY. Small paper wall sculptures that are hand painted with encaustic and hand stitched to form tiny boxes...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Encaustic, Archival Paper

Bars and Stripes, 2017, Nylon flag, Aluminum flag pole
Located in Darien, CT
David Borawski lives and works in Hartford, Connecticut, and received his BFA from the Hartford Art School of the University of Hartford. A multi-media installation artist, his work...
Category

2010s Conceptual Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Metal

Untitled
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle's artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Glass, Mirror, Wood, LED Light

Sinuosity petite in lavender (curvy, sculpture, biomorphic, pastel art)
Located in Quebec, Quebec
keywords; #sinuous, focus on material, sculptural folds, Aldo Chaparro, use of common materials, creased crinkled and wrinkled, angular, abstract sculpture, angular, process-oriented, mixed-media, sparse, biomorphic, abstract sculpture, contemporary design, sculpture, line form color, curvilinear forms, balance, smooth surfaces, contemporary minimalism, pop art, metallic surfaces, textile art, yellow, shiny, luxurious, curvy, pop art, kitsch, lavender art...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Concrete

Night Shift
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Text by Terence Sharpe There is a moment in Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris (1972) when the character Hari commits suicide by drinking liquid oxygen. As she is not actually a human, but an artificial hybrid product of the mysterious planet and the protagonists’ memories, she heals rapidly and is alive again minutes later. Her choice to take her own life is poignant, seemingly the action of a being becoming aware of its hopeless infinitude. Her realization that while the men will die on the space station or elsewhere, her existence is that of immortality, a deeply alienating notion that causes her to seek her own destruction. The Montreal artist Guillaume Lachapelle has one work that prompts a sense of eternal alienation that echoes Hari’s tragedy. The work greets the viewer with a empty doorway flanked by clinically white bookshelves...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Glass, Wood, LED Light, Acrylic

Sommeil
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle’s artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models – which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology – shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle’s work – for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness – these are the artist’s references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa – Centre d’Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

La déconvenue
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Text by Marsha Taichman [...] There is art unless there is so much missing we cannot build a structure around it.. - Kate Hall, from Water Tower, 1998-2000 (after Rachel Whiteread) Montreal artist Guillaume Lachapelle presents a new collection of works at Art Mûr that is sure to surprise and delight gallery goers. These works are full of pristine lines and beautiful intrigue. He constructs and presents miniatures and life-size pieces that are subversive and unusual upon close examination. In these pieces, scale can be quite skewed. Even when objects are the size that we expect them to be, say, a 15-foot silver gazebo that one may enter and stand inside, they seem small. Lachapelle’s works can be mounted displays of tiny mechanical-seeming devices, apparatuses of unknown origins with no clear purpose, despite the fact that they offer a distinct air of functionality. In the works that Lachapelle has selected for this exhibition at Art Mûr, his subject matter has moved away from human and animal scenes and delved deeper into free-standing machinations. This means that we will see a greater starkness and a closer focus on the materiality in his constructions. The collection is full of the unexpected and the unusual. A library with a sunken-in, curved interior of wavy shelves...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Untitled
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Text by Terence Sharpe There is a moment in Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris (1972) when the character Hari commits suicide by drinking liquid oxygen. As she is not actually a human, but an artificial hybrid product of the mysterious planet and the protagonists’ memories, she heals rapidly and is alive again minutes later. Her choice to take her own life is poignant, seemingly the action of a being becoming aware of its hopeless infinitude. Her realization that while the men will die on the space station or elsewhere, her existence is that of immortality, a deeply alienating notion that causes her to seek her own destruction. The Montreal artist Guillaume Lachapelle has one work that prompts a sense of eternal alienation that echoes Hari’s tragedy. The work greets the viewer with a empty doorway flanked by clinically white bookshelves...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Glass, Wood, LED Light

The Cell
Located in Montreal, Quebec
The Architecture of Knowledge in the work of Guillaume Lachapelle L. Sasha Gora Jorge Luis Borges imagined the universe as a library, one “composed of an indefinite and perhaps infinite number of hexagonal galleries.” The bookshelves in Guillaume Lachapelle’s rigorously detailed, architectural miniatures are similar imaginings of knowledge, infinity, and the meaning of books. When Lachapelle predominantly sculpted with wood, the library was already present in his work. Take for instance the delicate shelves in Maneges (2004-2006). In 2009, he began to employ 3D printing and since, he has drafted bookshelves as white, intricately printed sculptures. Fissure, 2009, a bookshelf whose centre collapses, like quicksand, into a void; Le piège, 2009, an isolated balcony that protrudes from a bookshelf; Évasion 2, 2011, a fragile staircase that leads to a corridor library. Despite their sculptural form, these pieces never feel static. They suggest something beyond the shelves. Books are often described as gateways to other worlds and the artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster exemplifies this literally. In her 2013 La Bibliothèque clandestine at Palais de Tokyo what at first appears to be a bookshelf is actually a rotating door that opens into a secret gallery. For Lachapelle’s sixth solo exhibition at Art Mûr, Vision, we encounter again the library. This time, he employs single-sided mirrors to exaggerate a sense of the infinite, getting closer to Borges’ indefinite library, such as in Awaiting Knowledge (2013). We confront the same architecture in Metro (2013) and Last Night (2013). A library, a subway car and a hallway from the Titanic, respectively, all melt into an intriguing yet alarmingly dark void. Where does the darkness at the end of hall lead to? Lachapelle’s miniatures act as a threshold between what is seen and not seen. Although a good five centuries apart, the printing press and 3D printing both belong to the history of print. However, in Lachapelle’s miniatures, books are separated from their use. We cannot read them. They are rendered decorative, almost fetishized, and so instead we must mediate on their symbolism. This requires imagination. Lachapelle’s models are far too tiny for us to occupy physically, and so we must occupy them with our imagination, as when we occupy books, turning the words into the stories and images of people and places. In Borges’ story, what began as extravagant happiness - the Library of Babel housing all books and holding all of the world’s answers – turned to depression: “The certitude that some shelf in some hexagon held precious books and that these precious books were inaccessible, seemed almost intolerable.” For Lachapelle, books represent a similar anxiety: as much as we know, there is always more that we don’t. Guillaume Lachapelle's artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models - which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology - shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle's work - for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness - these are the artist's references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa - Centre d'Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Post-Modern Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Plexiglass, LED Light

Night shift II
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Text by Terence Sharpe There is a moment in Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris (1972) when the character Hari commits suicide by drinking liquid oxygen. As she is not actually a human, but an artificial hybrid product of the mysterious planet and the protagonists’ memories, she heals rapidly and is alive again minutes later. Her choice to take her own life is poignant, seemingly the action of a being becoming aware of its hopeless infinitude. Her realization that while the men will die on the space station or elsewhere, her existence is that of immortality, a deeply alienating notion that causes her to seek her own destruction. The Montreal artist Guillaume Lachapelle has one work that prompts a sense of eternal alienation that echoes Hari’s tragedy. The work greets the viewer with a empty doorway flanked by clinically white bookshelves...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Glass, LED Light, Acrylic

Carrousel
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle's artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models - which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology - shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle's work - for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness - these are the artist's references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa - Centre d'Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Post-Modern Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

La forêt
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle's artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful universes which combine objects of undetermined purpose; in this way, he opens the conventions of our reality to fresh disposition. The architecture of his models - which Lachapelle has recently begun to make with the help of the latest 3-D printing technology - shows motifs originating from the everyday, certainly, but seeming strange, alienating or even uncanny when combined as the artist chooses. A kind of transition between two worlds often appears in Lachapelle's work - for example when the model of a library filled with books curves inwards and reveals a mysterious opening pointing into darkness - these are the artist's references to spaces and occurrences which may be concealed below the surface of outward semblance. Guillaume Lachapelle has participated in several solo and group exhibitions including Manèges at Circa - Centre d'Exposition Art Contemporain (Montreal) in 2006; Quebec Gold at the Ancien Collège des Jésuites (Rheims, France) in 2008 and in Abracadabra (Edward Day...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Post-Modern Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon

Nuit étoilée
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Guillaume Lachapelle's artistic practice is shaped predominantly by sculpture, expressed in the form of installations and detailed miniature models. Lachapelle presents playful unive...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Nylon, Glass, LED Light

Breath
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 works as been exhibited at th...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Steel

Vibrations Metalliques
Located in Miami, FL
TECHNICAL INFORMATION: Jesus Rafael Soto (June 5, 1923 - January 14, 2005, Venezuelan) Vibrations Metalliques 1969 painted metal with metal rod with nylon string 10 3/4 x 11 3/4 x 5...
Category

1960s Kinetic Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Metal

Carlos Medina, Rain Cylinder, 1999-2021, Spatial Intervention
Located in Miami, FL
Carlos Medina Rain Cylinder, 1999-2021 Spatial intervention of 60 pieces Polished aluminum carving pieces and nylon Drops. 6.3 in. 16 cm ea. Price: $1...
Category

2010s Kinetic Nylon Sculptures

Materials

Metal

Nylon sculptures for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Nylon 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 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, orange, green, 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 Ted VanCleave, Guillaume Lachapelle, Yayoi Kusama, and KAWS. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Pop Art, 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 Nylon sculptures, so small editions measuring 0.12 inches across are also available

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