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Ovus Polystyrensis Sculpture

Sasha Meret

United States

Sculpture, Plastic on Plastic

Size: 16 W x 20 H x 16 D in

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4424 Views
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About The Artwork

Free lunch for the eye Immanuel Kant was born in the Prussian city of Königsberg in 1724 and had ten siblings, but even before that arts were split into plastic and elastic. Sasha Meret is splitting the talk and walking the split: he conveys the entanglements of the elastic and the plastic through the shining of improbable honeycombs. Even if Gotham City froze over and all plastic spoons were left to never rot, and to no eye to see, Sasha would still trick the eye into glancing at their mortality. His spoongious arrangements of white, cheap, and many plastic spoons snatch immortality from the blind spot of usefulness. He could have done it with post stamps or pins, with banana peels or stolen stem cells, he is a virtuoso after all; but this time he hasn't. Here he is performing the convexing art of showing the bones’ flesh, that art that lets it be known that there are concavities inside every-thing and that the stars are made of feathers. The Saurian monstrosity of the hands which pinch the Harpies' harps, the fatsy umberella forever upside-down, drops of white blood clogged as a ha-ha-heart, the wings that wax imagination, the guitar akwardizing between two bars, and mostly, the yet again perfect egg – all these are, like the August mermaid, cold aphrodisiacs. Ignite tonight! Călin Mihăilescu April 2010

Details & Dimensions

Sculpture:Plastic on Plastic

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:16 W x 20 H x 16 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Award winning multi-media artist Sasha Meret was born in Romania in 1955, of Romanian and Russian parents. In his early years he lived in Moscow, Russia and later mostly in Bucharest, Romania. Since February 1987 he lives and works in New York City. From the very beginnings in his career as an artist he was ready to experiment with a wide range of materials and techniques. Painting, drawing, photography intersected with printmaking techniques like: intaglio, woodcut, aquatint or mono-type. Working in a variety of styles, from representational to abstract his imagery reflected his spiritual explorations, blending European, African, Asian, and esoteric symbolism in a highly personal visual language. He alternates figuration with abstraction in search for a balance between ideas and emotions. His main sources are his extensive readings on a wide variety of subjects as history, mythology, philosophy, literature and physics. In 2003 he was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. After the initial shock he rallied, refocused and sorted out his priorities and his work took a very different and surprising turn. Realizing that when he is in creative mode his PD symptoms practically disappeared, he became a workaholic. A combination of a large studio offered by a benefactor and very generous subsidy from one of his collectors allowed him to explore for several years working and experimenting in a variety of media without financial worries.This brought him a prestigious CODAvideo award for concept (https://www.codaworx.com/awards/video/2014/winners). His range of materials and techniques widened and sculpture/assemblages with found objects and photography became dominant in the recent ears. Keeping his body of work together for years allowed him to transform his studio into a continuously evolving Installation/Environment. In his work Meret tackles theories, concepts, and historical events, concurrently reversing perspective or reinterpreting facts until the world surrounding him becomes a little more reachable. He contemplates “If one removes sand grains one at a time, when does a heap of sand stop being a heap of sand?” and tests the wide concept of "change" and "transition". Often his works is an attempt to capture that elusive moment of transformation that is the fabric of what we call life. His approach to the creative process is a continuous search for new challenges.

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