There was once a time when a sculpture was judged for its realism. With the advents of 3D printing, programmable LEDs, and multidimensional digital manipulation, however, these classical qualifications have become obsolete. Chipping away with new technologies, the contemporary sculptor is no longer confined to a single medium or style. In 2014, we watched as sculptures defied gravity, questioned the future of formalism, dissected Marina Abramovic, and much more. This is the Year in Sculpture:
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+ In January, we meditated upon the meticulous wax creations of La Huy.+ We went behind-the-scenes of the world’s largest underwater sculpture by an artist is proving that “art can affect the environment.”
+ Manhattan glittered with musical history in this designer’s topographical attempt to “address the loss of multi-sensory experience in modern music.”+ In May, the Domino Sugar Factory reopened its factory doors for Kara Walker’s 75-foot-long sugar sphinx.+ Eyal Gever sculpted the unsculptable with the help of the largest 3D printer on Earth.
A frozen waterfall by Eyal Gever. Image courtesy of artist
+ Jeff Koons raided famous closets.+ Moscow’s Circle of Light Festival had a twisted take on classical art.
+ Moto Waganari 3D-printed a paradox with in his Real Virtuality series.+ We hung out with cardboard renderings of Argentinian endangered animals.+ We learned that a giant duck may soon be Copenhagen’s energy workhorse.+ Chris Ofili brought his legendary elephant dung back to the (already smelly) streets of NYC.+ In October, 1024architecture illuminated everything.+ We renounced our malfunctioning oscillation overthruster, and leaped into the fourth dimension with the help 4D hypercube.+ Thanksgiving provided us ample opportunity to play with our food.
+ We may be waiting for another nine years for a bitumen blob to drop from Julie Mecoli’s melting mini cities.+ And last but definitely not least, we 3D-printed Barack Obama.
This is the part three of our end-of-the-year series. Be sure to check out the year in brains and sound. Stay tuned as we continue to look back on 2014 and collect all of our favorite examples of modern creativity, fantastic innovations, and important trends.Related:[Best of 2014] The Year in Sound[Best of 2014] The Year in Brains
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