Human sculpture art

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Ishibashi Yui’s Sculptures Visualize Tension Between Humans and Nature | Hi-Fructose Magazine Illusion Kunst, Sculptures Céramiques, Foto Poses, Poses References, Art Et Illustration, Ap Art, Art Clay, Sculpture Installation, Figurative Sculpture

Fixated on a mythological depiction of nature, Japanese artist Ishibashi Yui sculpts feral children that appear to belong to another realm of reality. Pallid, hairless human bodies become fused with roots and vines, brought to life through a mixture of wood, resin, clay, wire and paint. Oftentimes, the figures appear imprisoned by the flora. In Then, It Returns Slowly, a pregnant woman's face erupts with flesh-colored growths that form a tree trunk. The character in Dream of 10 Billion Years…

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Dream Worlds Imagined in Contorted Clay Portraits by Johnson Tsang | Colossal Johnson Tsang, Lucid Dream, Colossal Art, Clay Faces, Soyut Sanat Tabloları, Masks Art, Inspirational Design, Lucid Dreaming, Figurative Sculpture

Johnson Tsang (previously) continues to create spectacularly emotive ceramic sculptures of the human face. The Hong Kong-based artist’s latest series, Lucid Dream II, features surreal contortions that squish, wring, melt, and stretch. Titles like “Remembrance,” “Extrication,” and “Unveiled” suggest an exploration of the liminal space between the conscious and subconscious, in addition to the self andContinue reading "Dream Worlds Imagined in Contorted Clay Portraits by Johnson Tsang"

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Japanese photographer Yuichi Ikehata creates realistic sculptures of human body parts using clay, wire and paper. He then photographs the sculptures and merges them into unrealistic worlds to create Long Term Memory (LTM), an ongoing photographic series that “puts audiences in the ambivalent position of not knowing what is real and what is not.” Sculptures Sur Fil, Sculpture Textile, Human Body Parts, Textile Sculpture, Colossal Art, Hand Sculpture, Digital Elements, A Level Art, Wire Sculpture

Japanese photographer Yuichi Ikehata creates realistic sculptures of human body parts using clay, wire and paper. He then photographs the sculptures and merges them into unrealistic worlds to create Long Term Memory (LTM), an ongoing photographic series that “puts audiences in the ambivalent position of not knowing what is real and what is not.” The 40-year old artist currently lives and works in Chiba, Japan.

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