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Sculpture, Glass on Glass
Size: 13 W x 13 H x 0.1 D in
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A one of a kind dystopian robot made out of recycled materials put together by a grand mastermind. Made of recycled Metals, Glass, light, and Plastics/Acrylics. TRIBOR, the dystopian capsule, is a safe space for you if something dangerous comes along. Once in, you can operate the arms and turn on the lights, it will make anything run away, thinking it is the capsule's brain sending radius waves. This Sculpture does not move, to be a stationary piece, lights up with a battery-powered light.
2020
Glass on Glass
One-of-a-kind Artwork
13 W x 13 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
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Internationally recognized fine artist, Ken Vrana, has been painting for over 55 years professionally. Growing up in the Hamptons, during an artistic explosion of incredible talent, he subsequently studied with seminal artists like William DeKooning, Larry Rivers, and Ashcan School artist, Valentine Arborgaste. In 1965 he was invited to participate in a special sculpture program at Syracuse University, and in 1966 he started school at Brooklyn’s Pratt Institute. During the next few years, while pursuing a degree in Interior Design, he also studied with artists like Andy Warhol. Over time he owned his own advertising agency in Atlanta and eventually made his way to Los Angeles and the film industry. Having never written anything professionally, within 2 weeks he had sold his first screenplay and soon found himself represented by the William Morris Agency. After 15 years he decided to change course and moved to Cary, North Carolina, a town south of Raleigh, and at age 49 decided to pursue something he’d wanted to do for years; go to law school. Shortly thereafter he created the 1 in 8 Foundation while working for Sir. Paul McCartney’s breast cancer charity. At about that same time he sold his first book, entitled 'Free Falling.' “I never paint for a particular audience,” Ken says, often creating paintings that seem to defy any established category, but instead, “I paint what inspires me and hope that collectors will find my work worthy of their attention." Currently, Ken is only working on limited artwork and pieces, due to a diagnosis of suspected Lewy Body Dementia.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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