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Forgotten King Sculpture

Alexander Kushnaryov

Ukraine

Sculpture, Wood on Wood

Size: 2.4 W x 9.1 H x 3.1 D in

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77 Views

7

ABOUT THE ARTWORK

I made this sculpture from a weathered piece of wood. It's was cracked, eaten by the bugs, but still had some ancient, royal aura around it. I carved around the form, exposing the natural structure of the material.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Sculpture:

Wood on Wood

Original:

One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:

2.4 W x 9.1 H x 3.1 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

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

Alexander was born in Baku, on the Caspian seashore. He began an art career in the early 1980s as a performance artist, later he created masks and light-bulb frames to enforce visual elements of his acts. Soon Alexander becomes raising star and contributor to many local underground art zines. While he worked as an aerospace engineer, he commenced small totem carvings on frames of wooden crates, which exported to different parts of Europe and Asia. His coworkers were very confused and disturbed by his “small totem” pieces, and they called it “unwanted.” The idea of “unwanted art” hunted Alexander and he self-curated “Unwanted Exhibitions”, he placed his sculptures on plates of unsuspected restaurant costumers, and semi-barricade dark alleyways with charcoal drawings on wooden crates. The reason behind it was to capture a reaction of people when art invades their private space without notice. Next step for him was “Unseen Exhibitions” – show his art for eight hours in unpopulated places like shipyard at night (“Viewed by Gulls and stay Dogs”), abandoned house (“Viewed by Rats & Cockroaches), mountain lake (Viewed by Sheep & Shepard with Dogs). Alexander’s mock-exhibitions was a response to how state art institutions, museums deal with young and emerging artists. Alexander works with Wood, Metal, and Papier-mâché, most of his materials are found objects. The main theme of his sculptures is the relationship between modern man/woman and their primal self. How we hide our raw emotion behind civilized masks, how we should act to stay accepted in different society circles. Alexander continues to work on his life-long project “Modern Gods” in it he sketches a portrait of a random person on the subway then transforms their features into stylized “primitive sculpture.” “It’s a reminder,” Alexander says about his sculptures, “we all have God-like power in us, we just need to rediscover it”

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