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Chuckies Cheese Print

Richard Arfsten

United States

Open Edition Prints Available:
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Photo Paper

Photo Paper

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10 x 8 in ($40)

10 x 8 in ($40)

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White ($80)

Black ($80)

White ($80)

Natural Wood ($80)

Metal: Light Pewter ($150)

Metal: Dark Pewter ($150)

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$120

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Artist Recognition
link - Featured in the Catalog

Featured in the Catalog

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Artist featured in a collection

ABOUT THE ARTWORK

The process I use to cast most of my work is called lost foam or evaporative pattern casting. It is extremely hard to control. Basically you burry a foam design in dry loose sand and pour molten metal on it. You always get something. The problom is it does not always look like the pattern. If you want to work in this process failure is your friend. When you fail you examine it and try to understand why and then do something to fix the reason. Problem is there is about 50 reasons for it to fail. The pattern is destroyed so all the time you invested in making it is wasted. Some times the failure is interesting. I live in a rural area and field mice get in your house in the winter to stay warm. They get on my work bench and eat my cookies that I snack on. They are really cute but I see their little bites in my food that I know is not healthy to eat. Artists look at the world a little different than most people. At any rate this sculpture looks like a mouse was snacking on it to me. If I wanted to make it look this way I would not be able to. Maybe I should call it "serendipity".

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Print:

Giclee on Photo Paper

Size:

10 W x 8 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:

15.25 W x 13.25 H x 1.2 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

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

I have an ambitious approach to life ... and to art ... make something happen every day ... but most of all have fun doing it! A sculptor first, and now working in 2D, I do my best to do just that. Presented here are examples of some of my work. •• My sculpture runs the gamut from abstract, to figurative, to architectural. The materials and methods used are diverse ... from figures modeled in clay or wax, then cast in pewter or bronze ... to aluminum maquettes (produced by evaporative pattern casting) which serve as the 3D blueprints for the pieces that are enlarged and fabricated from sheet metal of all kinds. •• My 2D pieces range from abstract to figurative. You’ll find Originals done in oils or acrylic, one-of-a-kind monotypes, collages, mixed media paintings, and more ... I love working in all mediums. Some of my 2D work may be available as reproductions on this site. ••• MY FASCINATION WITH SCIENCE FICTION & MAKE BELIEVE - When I was in second grade, television was new and the hottest thing. The "Adventures of Flash Gordon" was my favorite program. There was only one kid in the neighborhood who had a TV. We, all the kids, gathered at his house for every episode. I was a huge fan of the characters. Flash was cool and my hero. Dale Arden was OK but Princess Aura was way cooler because she was naughty. Ming The Mercilous was very interesting. But Dr. Zarkov and his super duper telescope - that could see into time forwards and backwards, far and near - was the star of the show for me. The spaceship was really hoakey. You could see the wire that it was traveling on and the little puffs of smoke coming out of it were a joke, even for me. But the concept of the show was magical. Also at that time there were radio shows about space travel and aliens and monsters. I would listen to those shows with my grandfather as I sat on the floor next to the big wooden box radio so I could get the full impact of the sounds. •• These shows inspired me to draw spaceships, mostly "new and improved" versions of Flash's ship. I taped them all over my bedroom walls. At night I would travel with Flash. We would go to distant parts of the Universe and explore ancient ruins - like what I saw in National Geographic when I was not looking at the bare-breasted girls of exotic cultures. (I think artists and sculptors, are to a large part, voyeurs.) Those memories pop up in my art over and over. •• Faces also intrigue and inspire me.

Artist Recognition
Featured in the Catalog

Featured in Saatchi Art's printed catalog, sent to thousands of art collectors

Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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