ARTIST: Alwar Balasubramaniam


Balasubramaniam installs his work like its a part of the wall, connected as one. He wants his work to be believable and look real which is not really something I'm interested in but i really like his use of plaster and how his sculpture interact with light of he makes interesting shapes. 

Alwar Balasubramaniam: Uncharted Territories 
'Seeing is believing. In Alwar Balasubramaniam’s case, seeing and believing are two separate acts, depending on your discernment and perception. His prints, paintings, and sculptures, with their constant plays on the visible and invisible, illusion and certainty, challenge notions of the real and the unreal. Walk into a Balasubramaniam exhibition and you will be confronted by a surreal world where walls are pulled like fabric by disembodied hands, where a figure of the artist sits with his head buried deep in the wall, where angels emerge as if by magic from blocks of stone and sculptures dissolve into nothingness.
A printmaker, painter, and sculptor, Balasubramaniam refuses to be slotted into any one category, stating flatly, “ You are whatever you are.” He would rather be known as “a person who creates art.'

by Minhazz Majumdar
  http://www.sculpture.org/documents/scmag08/dec_08/balasub/balasub.shtml

ARTIST: Hreinn Fridfinnsson


Fridfinnsson's work uses everyday materials and objects and changes them to create a new outcome. He uses time as an extra element in his work to evoke feeling and memory. 
His ideas relate to some of the work i do in the sense that i work with everyday objects and materials and then change their physicality. His works like mine are free of background stories they are just in the immediate present and have potential for the future.
Serpentine Gallery - Hreinn Fridfinnsson 
'Hreinn Fridfinnsson is one of Iceland’s leading conceptual artists. His work is celebrated for its lyricism and stark poetry that transcends the often-commonplace subjects and materials that the artist uses to create his pieces. Although there is a consistency of theme and a common emotional thread to his art, the media that Fridfinnsson employs are remarkably varied in scale and substance, from photography, drawings and tracings to presentations and installations of sound, texts and ready-mades.
Fridfinnnsson often presents found objects with which he interferes as little as possible, creating new works that investigate ideas of the self and of time. He has said that: ‘Notions of time are always compelling. I read what comes my way about physics and mathematics, but I read as one who is uninitiated. The feeling and the interest in the essence of time is serious, but my dealing with time is not knowledge-based; it is more exploratory and feeling-based.’'  

ARTIST: Aleana Egan


I'm interested in Egan's work because she uses everyday materials that can be found around a studio then uses them to make something else. She also changes the form of ready made environments, using shape and scale to create a new experience of a commonly used space.
Drawing Room - Aleana Egan
'Drawing plays a significant role in Egan’s work, with a sketchbook providing a repository for the noting down of ideas and experimentation with forms that undergo many changes as they are transformed into collages, sculptures or films. Ideas are triggered through observation of her surroundings, be it the Irish landscape or the space in which she makes or exhibits work, and through memories of childhood experiences and works of literature. Her works evolve through a series of stages, with each successive layer gaining a density until the final form emerges, coherent and cogent, yet insistently resisting the stamp of the finite. The meandering, sensuous line that dominates her sculptures, films and drawings suggests a condition of flux. Egan often works with very crude materials such as cardboard, plaster and concrete, and her sculptures are painted with carefully mixed, matt and muted colours of greys and blues. There is a fine tension and taut balance in all her work regardless of material or position in space. Her hanging hand-made sculptures made of cardboard and filler appear utterly opposite to the hard line and tension of the steel sculptures. Her new 4 metre high steel sculpture titled Binet’s addition, is based on Emile Zola’s novel Au Bonheur des Dames an observation of one of the most famous department stores ‘La Bon Marche’ of the French architect RenĂ© Binet, who created the iron-framed elevator for Parisian shops. In a new work Outfit, Egan literally photographs her models, mostly friends and family, from the neck down wearing a variety of outfits. Standing with their back or front to the camera, these are objective recordings: each figure stands motionless in the same light and same conditions. It is the shape of the form, the colour and visual composition that interests Egan. She does not wish to tell stories or make grand gestures but to find appropriate forms to render psychological states and experiences. An artists’ book will be published by the Drawing Room to coincide with the exhibition. Aleana Egan was born in Dublin in 1979 and lives between Berlin and Dublin.'
  
Drawing Room - Aleana Egan: In conversation with Dr Sarah Lowndes
'Drawing forms the starting point of Egan’s work, with a sketchbook providing a repository for the noting down of ideas and experimentation with forms that are developed into autonomous drawings, collages, sculptures and films.  Ideas are triggered through observations made during everyday life, but also by memories of childhood experiences and works of literature. Often inchoate, these are atmospheric and sensory triggers that lack narrative definition and carry through into her practice through a subtle and intuitive working process.  For example, it was the aura of tightness, a certain tension, that reading Jean Rhy’s novel ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ left her with, and it was this quality that she sought to engender in a sculptural form Character, 2010, although quite different from the drawing that Egan made after reading this story, does retain some of its characteristics.
Her works evolve through a series of stages, with each successive layer gaining a density until the final form emerges, coherent and cogent, yet insistently resisting the stamp of the finite.  Her practice is dominated by a meandering, sensuous line which carries through into the fluid way in which her films are made and suggests a condition of flux.  When the line is filled to form a plane and to become a receptacle, it is still kept open, to collect snow or rain water, as in, for example, In Their Order of Appearance, 2010, made for the Sculpture Center in New York.  Egan often works with very crude materials such as cardboard, plaster and concrete, and her sculptures are painted with carefully mixed, very matt colours. The rawness and openness of the sentiment or idea that triggered the work is embodied by these carefully manipulated materials.  Egan does not wish to tell stories or make grand gestures but to find appropriate forms to engender psychological states and memories.' 
 
 

MY WORK


No Name, 2012
Acrylic on wood,
41cm x 30cm

I am interested in using found or given materials and then making them into something new. 
I want the viewer to engage with the art in a way that when moving around they find new qualities that might have gone unnoticed from another angle.
I am also very aware of the surrounding environment and how it also interacts with the art. 
Light is another element that i am very interested in. How the light reacts to colour and shape changing the environment around the work.  

ARTIST: Michal Budny

Installation view
Installation view 


Budny has a strong relationship between his artworks and the environment in which the works are shown. 
Budny creates models of objects that he then places within a space. (though the models do not have to have a fixed material form)
Budny echos reality by installing these models into the gallery space, Creating new meaning for the everyday objects or experiences as its made monumental through its installation within the space.   

ARTIST: Karla Black

"While there are ideas about psychological and emotional developmental processes held within the sculptures I make, the things themselves are actual physical explorations into thinking, feeling, communicating and relating. They are parts of an ongoing learning, or search for understanding, through a material experience that has been prioritised over language." - Karla Black

http://www.axisweb.org/ofSARF.aspx?SELECTIONID=34

I find Black's idea of physical explorations through making and thinking interesting in the sense that my works are strongly based on the objects relation to its surrounding environment and other objects within the space.

ARTIST: Karla Black

Platonic Solid, 2009, 
Plaster powder, powder paint, sugar paper, chalk, lipstick

Made To Wait, 2009
Cellophane, sellotape, paint, toothpaste, hair gel, nail varnish, moisturising cream

 Black uses process based sculptures that are mainly made from domestic materials.

ARTIST: Rafal Bujnowsk

           
Rafal Bujnowsk
Lamp Black. Cubes, 2008
oil on canvas (diptych), each 123 x 176 cms

Bujnowsk painting process entails layering thick brushstrokes of paint onto a canvas creating the illusion of a 3D object that is purely made on a 2D surface.   
He uses this process to manipulate his materials and transform them into something completely new. Bujnowsk's flat surface then interacts with its surrounding light creating that illusion of space within the picture frame. His artworks interact within the gallery space creating a new look from merely walking around the painting and viewing it from different angles.