This has been an eventful year for Carol Ross, a sculptor whose steady artistic growth seems to be rewarded by , recognition in equal proportion….see the full feature in October’s magazine.
The International Sculpture Center 2004 Outstanding Student Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Awards
The lnternatronal Sculpture Center is proud to present the winners of the 2004 Outstanding Student Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award. This year’s awards program attracted a record number of nominees from university sculpture programs in North America and abroad.
“Imitation Knotty Pine”
Memphis, TN Delta Axis @ Marshall Arts Artists and art historians are equally engaged in interpreting the past, though what appears in history books and on museum walls is not always what motivates studio work. Indeed, one might suggest that artists construct the past they need—or desire—based on the images they tack to corkboards or
Sung Ho Kim
Belleville, Illinois William & Florence Schmidt Art Center, Southwestern Illinois College Architect Sung Ho Kim recently exhibited 10 models that explore alternative design strategies relevant to sculpture. His unique forms based on non-linear thinking, intuition, and abstraction respond to cultural, spatial, technological, and human needs.
Jim Sanborn
Washington, DC Incessant clicking, coiling black…see the full review in October’s magazine.
Lyndal Osborne
Banff, Canada Lyndal Osborne’s Shoalwan: River…see the full review in October’s magazine.
“Open Spaces”
Vancouver, Canada “Open Spaces” imagined the entire…see the full review in October’s magazine.
Stephen De Staebler
New York I have often reflected on the work…see the full review in October’s magazine.
Christopher Saucedo: A Play on the “Real”
Christopher Saucedo, Temple-Arcade, 1/4 scale replica (unassembled), 2004. Cast aluminum, 22 x 57.5 x 6.5 in. Ludic in temper, New Orleans sculptor Christopher Saucedo makes art that might be described as Postmodernist fun. While nodding respectfully at Rodin, Brancusi, and a host of others, he draws from wide-ranging sources both popular and learned, posing mischievous queries
The Body Disembodied: New Directions in Modernist Sculpture
The four sculptors united by this article- Vincent Barré, Willard Boepple, Clay Ellis, and John Gibbons-do not constitute a group in the usual sense….see the full review in October’s magazine.