Showing posts with label sculptor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sculptor. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Sunny Isles Beach Presents Art Uncorked with an Exhibition for Miami Art Week Featuring Espace Meyer Zafra and Mylene Costa

 


The City of Sunny Isles Beach proudly announces the return of its recurring art series, Art Uncorked, with a captivating exhibition during Miami Art Week. This event, presented in partnership with the acclaimed Paris-based gallery Espace Meyer Zafra and Sunny Isles Beach based artist Mylene Costa, will run from December 1 to December 16, 2025, at the Sunny Isles Beach Government Center.


Nadir Solar
Size: 45 × 17 cm
Year: 2025
Technique: automotive resin pearl graphite finish
Photos by: Raul C. N. Neto (N.F.S.N.)


Founded in 2000 by Liliane Zafrani in the historic Marais district of Paris, Espace Meyer Zafra is renowned for its focus on innovative and boundary-pushing art. The gallery has worked closely with an international roster of distinguished artists over the last two decades, representing talents such as Yaacov Agam, Marina Apollonio, Ennio L. Chiggio, and Piotr Kowalski, among many others.


Cripta 4444
Size: 69 × 20 cm
Year: 2025
Technique: automotive resin high-gloss metallic green finish
Photos by: Raul C. N. Neto (N.F.S.N.)


This exhibition will feature a diverse selection of contemporary works from a group of the gallery's prominent artists, including:

1. Manuel Mérida

2. Carlos Cruz-Diez

3. Yaacov Agam

4. Francisco Salazar

5. Piotr Kowalski

6. Richard Schur

7. João Carlos Galvão

8. David Rodriguez Caballero

9. Rene Ugarte

10. Jean-Claude Reussner

This year’s exhibition will also feature the work of Brazilian sculptor and Sunny Isles Beach based artist Mylene Costa, whose work stands out for its feminine power, formal elegance, and refined aesthetic sensitivity. Recognized internationally for her unique artistic signature, Costa has exhibited in cultural centers across Europe and Latin America, gaining increasing visibility in major contemporary art shows and attracting the attention of critics, curators, and collectors alike.



Sara 11:11
Size: 76 × 20 cm
Year: 2025
Technique: automotive resin with pearlescent finish
Photos by: Raul C. N. Neto (N.F.S.N.)


The City will also host a special reception event titled “The Shape of Art: A Live Curation” on December 3 from 6 – 8 p.m. at the Sunny Isles Beach Government Center featuring champagne, hors d’oeuvres, and the opportunity to hear from gallerist Liliane Zafrani and artist Mylene Costa.

Exhibition Hours:

The exhibition will be open to the public from December 1 – 16 with the following hours:

• Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. and 6 – 8 p.m.

• Saturday & Sunday, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.


Location:

The Sunny Isles Beach Government Center is located at 18070 Collins Avenue, Sunny Isles Beach,

FL 33160.


Join us in Sunny Isles Beach for this exciting exhibition, where international contemporary art converges with the vibrant atmosphere of Miami Art Week. For more information, please contact sibmedia@sibfl.net.


Rubra
Size: 54 × 17 cm
Year: 2025
Technique: pigmented automotive resin
Photos by: Raul C. N. Neto (N.F.S.N.)


About Espace Meyer Zafra: Espace Meyer Zafra has built a legacy as one of Paris' leading art spaces, specializing in post-war and contemporary art. Housed in a beautifully restored 19th-century Haussmann building in the Marais, the gallery’s diverse roster includes artists from various countries and backgrounds, all united by a shared commitment to pushing the boundaries of artistic expression.

About Mylene Costa: Mylene Costa is a Brazilian sculptor of international recognition, whose work stands out for its feminine power, formal elegance, and refined aesthetic sensitivity. Born in Cuiabá, Brazil, she has built a solid and authentic career, skillfully balancing family life, rural production, and a flourishing artistic journey between Brazil and the United States.


Nebra 1999
Size: 60 × 40 cm
Year: 2025
Technique: resin with automotive finish
Photos by: Raul C. N. Neto (N.F.S.N.)


About Sunny Isles Beach Art Uncorked: Art Uncorked is a recurring art series presented by the City of Sunny Isles Beach, designed to celebrate creativity and inspire conversation through dynamic exhibitions and events. Featuring collaborations with renowned galleries, acclaimed artists, and innovative creators from around the world and within our own community, Art Uncorked offers a platform for diverse artistic expressions.

As an integral part of Sunny Isles Beach’s cultural offerings, Art Uncorked will continue to bring captivating exhibitions to the city well beyond Miami Art Week, fostering an ongoing dialogue between art, community, and inspiration.

About the City of Sunny Isles Beach: Located on a barrier island in northeast Miami-Dade County, the City of Sunny Isles Beach has transformed into a world-class destination over the past two decades. With a population of more than 22,200 residents, the city is known for its cultural diversity and features 11 parks within its 1.78 square miles, including the iconic Newport Fishing Pier. Sunny Isles Beach is also home to the A-rated Norman S. Edelcup/Sunny Isles Beach K-8 School. Learn more at sibfl.gov

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Explore the Sculptural Universe of Mylene Costa: Sculpting Time, Memory, and the Poetics of Form

 


In the contemporary art world, few sculptors evoke such a harmonious blend of strength and sensuality as Mylene Costa, a Brazilian artist whose work stands out for its feminine power, formal elegance, and refined aesthetic sensitivity. Her sculpture is both language and thought — an invitation to contemplate the body, form, and memory. Based in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, and deeply rooted in her Brazilian heritage, Costa bridges cultures and emotions through organic, timeless structures that resonate on both local and global stages. Art collectors and aficionados are cordially invited to experience internationally recognized and award-winning sculptor Mylene Costa’s exhibition at White’s Art Gallery in Miami, with an Opening Reception on Saturday, September 20th, 2025, from 6 - 10pm. The gallery is located in the Bird Road Art District at 7428 SW 42nd Street in Miami, Florida 33155.


Impulso Vital, Bronze, 18.5 x 15 cm


Costa’s journey as an artist is as poetic as her sculptures. About two decades ago, she experienced what she describes as a nearly spiritual calling. While on a flight, she felt an overwhelming urge to mold clay—an impulse so strong that she purchased materials immediately upon landing. Within ten minutes, she created Impulso Vital, her first sculpture, marking the awakening of her artistic gift. Today, her body of work spans bronze, resin, and mixed-media sculptures, each piece born from the fusion of intuition and reflection, evoking questions of time, ancestry, human relationships, and the silence of expanding forms. Recognized for her unique artistic signature, Mylene has exhibited in cultural centers across Europe, Latin America, and Brazil, gaining increasing visibility in major contemporary art shows and attracting the attention of critics, curators, and collectors alike. Her award-winning works, such as Fenda do Tempo (2023), embody a dialogue between the tangible and the intangible, merging industrial techniques with a lyrical approach to shape and space. We recently had the pleasure to chat with the artist to learn more about her work and current projects:


Q – What is the best part about being an artist?

A – For me, the best part of being an artist is the connection with a three-dimensional sphere where I almost detach myself from matter in order to give life to another. This process brings lightness and a profound transformation, often leading me to reflect on the true needs of existence. Being in contact with the raw material, stripped of any interfering elements, reveals the essence of creation and the essential truth of being.


Q – Where does your inspiration come from, and how would you describe your work?

A – Everything can be a source of inspiration for me. A space, an object, a gesture, all have the potential to become art. Often, even the rhythm of a song guides the movement I bring into a sculpture or a painting. When the mind is freed from constraints, a fertile ground opens for intuition, and it is in this state that my creation unfolds: a dialogue between the visible and the invisible.


Q – How did you get started as an artist? Tell us about your background, influences, and the path you took to becoming an artist.

A – Art has always been present in my life in many forms. From an early age, I felt deeply connected to theater, dance, and painting, but for a long time these passions remained in the background, as something I simply admired. Yet when a gift truly exists, there comes a moment when it insists on being revealed, and for me, that awakening was profoundly transformative. About twenty years ago, while on a flight, I felt an uncontrollable urge to place my hands in clay. It was an intense, almost spiritual experience. As soon as I landed, before even arriving home, I stopped to buy clay, not fully understanding what was happening within me. In less than ten minutes, I created my very first piece, Impulso Vital, a work with echoes reminiscent of Rodin. In that moment, I understood my true calling and the depth of my artistic gift.


Incepta, Pigmented resin sculpture (originally in steel), 90 x 60 x 20 cm


Q – Which artist or artists (past and/or present) do you admire most and why?

A – I deeply admire artists such as Rodin, Modigliani, and Paul Cézanne, each with a singular contribution: Rodin for the expressive power of sculpture, Modigliani for the poetic elegance of his elongated human forms, and Cézanne for his transformative vision that paved the way for modernity. Among contemporary artists, I particularly admire Anish Kapoor and Jaume Plensa, whose material and symbolic explorations resonate strongly with my own sensibility. Kapoor for the way he investigates matter and the void, creating almost spiritual experiences, and Plensa for the monumental poetry of his human figures, which evoke presence and silence.


Q – What is your creative process like, how do you describe how you create one of your masterpieces?

A – My creative process unfolds in different ways, depending on the stage I am in. At times, I feel that the work already exists within the material, as if it were silently present, and my role is simply to remove the excess to reveal it. In other moments, creation emerges from a sudden vision, a flash that appears in my mind like a scan of the form before it even exists. There is also always a dimension of research, both material and conceptual. I explore the relationship between matter and presence, experimenting with different mediums while reflecting on themes that permeate my artistic poetics. This movement is always intuitive and dynamic, a constant dialogue between what is already there and what still needs to be revealed.


Q – What is your favorite piece you created and why?

A – It is difficult to choose just one favorite piece, as each creation marks a special moment in my journey. Impulso Vital holds a unique place in my life as it was my very first work, the awakening of my artistic gift. At present, I am deeply captivated by Sol, which is currently in the casting phase, a sculpture I feel truly passionate about. And Fenda do Tempo represents a new stage of modernity in my practice, a language I greatly appreciate and one that opens paths to new creative possibilities.


Q – What message or emotion are you trying to convey in your work, are there any recurring themes or motifs?

A – I strive to create works that speak to the unconscious, capable of capturing the gaze and inviting an intimate interaction with the viewer. Sensuality is a constant presence in my creations, expressed through lines and forms that evoke seduction both in the feminine and in the abstract. Organicity, flow, and the transformation of matter are recurring paths, guiding the work beyond mere aesthetic contemplation toward a profound and sensitive reflection.


Fenda do Tempo, Automotive resin with internal acrylic painting, 60 x 25 x 20 cm


Art collectors and aficionados are cordially invited to experience Mylene Costa’s art exhibition at White’s Art Gallery in Miami, with an Opening Reception on Saturday, September 20th, 2025, from 6 - 10pm. The gallery is located in the Bird Road Art District at 7428 SW 42nd Street in Miami, Florida 33155.

For further information visit: www.mylenecosta.com
Follow Mylene Costa on Instagram @MyleneCostaArt

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Lucy Mattos Museum - Magnificent Contemporary Art Space Located in Buenos Aires, Argentina

'City Woman'

Renowned Sculptor Lucy Mattos is a professor of Fine Arts, specialized in Sculpture, graduated from the prestigious Prilidiano Pueyrredon University in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She has been working in her atelier in Buenos Aires since 1980 and participates in numerous exhibitions and art fairs. Her monumental sculptures are located in public spaces, and she lectures, as well as teaches; and has been a Juror of many top tier juried shows. Lucy Mattos is the Director of the Lucy Mattos Museum, established in 2012. 


'Birdfish Woman'


She is influenced by the masters Henry Moore, Pablo Picasso and something by Salvador Dalí, and feels great admiration for Major Master Michelangelo Buonarroti. Her works range from monumental sculpture to artistic jewelry, with a primary focus on the figure of Woman from a symbolic point of view. The artist uses materials bronze, silver, wood, white metals, acrylics, polyester resin, cement, alabaster and natural fibers, among others. In 1990 she created the polyester-intralight neon technique, which allows light to come from inside the artworks, breaking the paradigm of traditional sculpture.

The Lucy Mattos Museum is located in San Isidro, Buenos Aires - Argentina. Permanently exhibiting her artworks, as well as temporary exhibitions of invited artists and hosting continuous cultural activities, art programming and events.

Citibank distinguished her with the “Creative Women” award. The Senate of the Province of Buenos Aires recognizes her as an “Outstanding Woman” in 2015. Recipient of the 60 Masters of Contemporary Art Award in France 2016 and New York 2018. Mattos was nominated in 2017 for the Global Art Awards, final shortlist at Burj Khalifa in Dubai. In 2018 she presented her art film, “Where are we going?” in Spain. In 2020 she was part of the Guggenheim Museum's 60th Anniversary Book and in 2021, she exhibited works in Hong Kong and at the Firenze Biennale, Italy.

Her artworks are in the permanent collections of museums and in the private collections of collectors all over the world - from Argentina, Brazil, Panama, the United States, Mexico, Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Israel, Japan and South-Korea, to name a few.



Monday, April 10, 2023

Bakehouse Art Complex Artist Highlight: Ian Fichman

 

Artist Ian Fichman. Photo by Pedro Wazzan. 

Ian Fichman is a Bakehouse artist whose practice is mainly comprised of metalwork and illustration. In seeking to defy the familiar, each sculpture he creates is uniquely assembled in an effort to bring new characters to life. Ultimately, Fichman's stylized skeletal figures aim to chronicle his own experiences, in a way that anyone may identify with.


Can you tell us about your artistic practice?

My artistic practice is quite grueling. Each piece begins with a simple pose for which I am the model. My choices are based mainly on movement and aesthetics and creating a straightforward narrative. Each work requires a lot of physical labor, fire, and electricity to create—not to mention blood, sweat and tears. Steel is limited in its range of motion, so it takes a particular amount of skill and patience to make it do what I want.

I put my works together much like a Lego set. I typically start with the torso shape and then build outward. The hands tend to be the pivotal point in the work. I end up taking an exorbitant amount of time creating them. I put as much personality and motion into them as possible, as it is evident that once added, they really bring the entire sculpture to life. The hands, in my view, become the face of the figure. The figures remain faceless because they are about all of us, not just one particular character.

Then, I work back through and add all the other elements to bulk up the mass, correct proportions, and add counterweights onto areas like the legs and ankles. On average they take about 3 to 6 months to complete.

Each sculpture is given a fitting cliché as a title, but also a “codename” of sorts. The title is what the piece is called, but not what people tend to call it. They tend to call it a one-word phrase, which ends up being the “codename,” or what the piece is commonly referred to as.

Tell us about a personal artistic project or body of work that you are currently excited about.

I’m very excited about my new series entitled HOLLOWS. They are very simplistic compared to my other work, with a retro-futuristic boxy aesthetic. There are quadrupeds that simply consist of a piece of medium sized square tube for a body and then I fabricate their robotic legs.

I feel like they’re a fun departure from my normal stuff. They’re more easily engaged with by the general public. Generally, I just think they’re really cute.

Tell us about how you have developed as an artist since you began working at Bakehouse

I consider myself extremely lucky to be a resident at the Bakehouse Art Complex. It’s hard to name all the ways in which this facility has helped me grow as an artist. From being able to create friendships with my peers, being part of an amazing group of people with the common goal to continue creating art every day, to our community’s easy access to various and numerous opportunities to display artwork and study all sorts of different mediums. This is not to mention all the art shows, sales, and inquiries.

In my humble opinion, Bakehouse Art Complex is one of the most valuable institutions that we have in Miami-Dade County.


Visit Ian Fichman in Studio #1 at Bakehouse Art Complex, located at 561 NW 32nd Street in Miami, Florida 33127.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Experience an Intimate Glimpse into Art Palm Beach with Sculptor Ágnes Nagy

Hungarian Sculptor Ágnes Nagy has been developing her career as a sculptor since childhood. At a very young age she attended the Medgyessy Ferenc sculpting workshop led by the sculptor Gábor Szabó in Pestújhely, one of the northern suburbs of Budapest. And later graduated from the Secondary School of Fine and Applied Arts of Budapest, known as “Kisképző” in 1994. Her large statues of animals in glazed fireclay, brass, bronze, and steel mixed media embody specific spiritual, ideological and moral meaning.

Sculptor Ágnes Nagy with one of her sculptures‘LION’ Saint Mark
Glazed fireclay, brass, mixed media, 105 x 65 x 65 cm, 2018

“The framework of my life is made through my sculpting, and it is able to hold me on the ground as much as it is able to take me away from reality both in years with difficulties and trials and the happy and successful periods of time,” said Nagy of her work. As far as her subject matter is concerned, “I didn’t choose animals, they were the ones who found me and refuse to let me go for now,” explained the artist.


Ágnes Nagy’s work was recently exhibited at Art Palm Beach from January 31 – February 03, 2020 with Erdész Gallery & Design. “The expressiveness of Nagy’s artistic credo is embodied in bronze, glazed fireclay, stainless steel, and realistic animal portrayals. Every sculpture by Ágnes can be given a specific spiritual, ideological and moral meaning—that may be reformulated by the viewer in several ways,” said Adam Erdesz of Erdész Gallery.

Ágnes Nagy at Art Palm Beach 2020, Booth 536, Erdész Gallery & Design

To learn more about this fascinating artist, for sales, commissions, general inquires or future show information, email art@agnesnagy.com and visit https://www.agnesnagy.com/

Sunday, March 29, 2020

The Magnificent Sculptures Of Ágnes Nagy Combine Reality, Imagination, Nature & Mysticism


Hungarian Sculptor Ágnes Nagy has been developing her career as a sculptor since childhood. Her large statues of animals embody specific spiritual, ideological and moral meaning. At a very young age Ágnes Nagy attended the Medgyessy Ferenc sculpting workshop led by the sculptor Gábor Szabó in Pestújhely, one of the northern suburbs of Budapest. And later graduated from the Secondary School of Fine and Applied Arts of Budapest, known as “Kisképző” in 1994. Her large statues of animals in glazed fireclay, brass, bronze, and steel mixed media embody specific spiritual, ideological and moral meaning.

‘ELEPHANT’, Glazed fireclay, 100 x 60 x 60 cm, 2010 In the Private Collection of the European scupture garden in Balatonalmádi, Hungary Exhibited at Gallery Virág Judit in 2011, the City Zoo Budapest, Hungary in 2011, and the Natural Science Museum Budapest, Hungary in 2012

“The framework of my life is made through my sculpting, and it is able to hold me on the ground as much as it is able to take me away from reality both in years with difficulties and trials and the happy and successful periods of time,” said Nagy of her work. As far as her subject matter is concerned, “I didn’t choose animals, they were the ones who found me and refuse to let me go for now,” explained the artist.

‘RHINO’, Glazed fireclay, 80 x 40 x 45 cm, 2007Private Collection. Exhibited at Virág Judit Gallery 2011, Budapest City Zoo 2011, the Natural Science Museum 2012, Villa Vaszary Balatonfüred 2018, Falk Art Forum 2018



Ágnes Nagy’s work was recently exhibited at Art Palm Beach from January 31 – February 03, 2020 with Erdész Gallery & Design. “The expressiveness of Nagy’s artistic credo is embodied in bronze, glazed fireclay, stainless steel, and realistic animal portrayals. Every sculpture by Ágnes can be given a specific spiritual, ideological and moral meaning—that may be reformulated by the viewer in several ways,” said Adam Erdesz of Erdész Gallery.

Art Palm Beach 2020, Booth 536, Erdész Gallery & Design

“Art is a way of life in which the artist’s professional and personal life are not separated. It’s not a consciously made choice, so every artist takes the responsibility to do what they love most and are the best at, and through it all they can produce something for people to enjoy. Anyone who has ever visited an exhibition or has artwork in their home will know the power of art. It can impress people, fill them up with positive vibes, can contribute to the growth of their personality and sense of style, and their becoming something more. 

'Unicorn', Glazed Fireclay, etchingmixed media, 122 x 84 cm, 2019
By creating art, I can connect to people on an entirely different level, I can reach emotional strings vibrating deep inside, which is only possible through art.” This internationally collected sculptor plans to hold more exhibitions in the United States, "visual arts are about designing objects and figurative and non-figurative shapes, and I am fundamentally interested in creating artworks that can be displayed in indoor spaces, a piece of art that people can live with. This is a tiny market in Hungary, collectors and artists know each other by name. The segment of the customers who purchase contemporary sculptures is even smaller. It is necessary to extend this market to international customers.”

‘JUMPING JAGUAR’, Bronze, 40 x 8 x 17 cm, 2009. Art Palm Beach 2020, Booth 536, Erdész Gallery & Design

To learn more about this fascinating artist, for sales, commissions, general inquires or future show information, email art@agnesnagy.com and visit https://www.agnesnagy.com/

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

The Incredible Miami Sculptor & Illustrator Ian Fichman


Miami-based sculptor and illustrator Ian Fichman is known for his amusing metal sculptures, creating an army of steel, rustic figures – each with a unique vibe and story – at the Bakehouse Art Complex in the Wynwood Arts District.


“My artwork is a sardonic narrative of human existence. Each one-of-a-kind sculpture is uniquely assembled piece by piece, bringing its character to life. Their bodies are built around stylized skeletal structures, focusing on the framework of our being. The figures are mutually faceless, symbolizing our kinship as human beings through the shared struggles of our endeavors. My sculptures chronicle life experiences, each driven by different desires but similarly seeking a correct modus operandi to fulfill their own aspirations, if there even is one.”


Ian Fichman was born in Miami, Florida in 1978. With an outlook that defies the familiar, Ian renounces the regularly scheduled program. He has always been a weirdo. During his years at Florida State University, where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in Studio Art in 2002, he was introduced to metalwork. Given the freedom to explore the possibilities of the medium, Ian found fulfillment working with his hands.


In 2010, after a brief venture into the digital arts, he returned to sculpture. Joining the program at San Diego State University, Ian gained unlimited access to the sculpture lab where he worked as a technician. It was there that he began to fine-tune the style and techniques that have made his work what it is today. Returning to his hometown, Ian set up shop at Studio #1 in the Bakehouse Art Complex in Wynwood. Committed to creating, he works full time in his practice to expand his portfolio, while searching for opportunities to increase the reach of his work.


You can find Fichman and his series of uniquely assembled, one-of-a-kind art pieces at the Bakehouse Art Complex in Studios #1 & #12 located in the Wynwood Arts District at 561 NW 32nd Street in Miami, Florida 33127. www.ianfichman.com

Monday, July 23, 2018

Penny Hardy Creates Sculptures With A Visible Energy

Penny Hardy originally trained as a Scientific Illustrator enabling her to explore the intricacies and delicate detail of natural forms and structure and the fundamental discipline of observational draughtsmanship. These core skills provided a strong basis on which to explore the natural and human landscape in greater depth. Throughout her training and consequent working life alongside Architects and designers, she developed a deep interest in three dimensional forms and sculpture which has always been at the heart of all her work past and present.

'You Ble Me Away'

A self taught sculptor, learning new techniques and methods as each idea developed, she adapted to the demands of each new sculpture and has built a varied and dynamic portfolio.

'The Kiss'

The sense of movement and dynamics within sculpture provides it with its own life and vitality.  She tries to capture this in all her pieces, transforming inert materials into sculptures with a visible, tangible energy.

'Yin & Yang'

There is a richness in discarded man-made metal items, skillfully made and creating their own mechanical energy, she brings that depth to new forms, re-using that energy for a different purpose, transforming their function to create a new entity.

'Resilience'

The liquid, fluid and flowing forms of the cast pieces dramatically reflect the movement of light across the sculptures. The dance figures, inspired by the dynamic forms of contemporary dancers use flexible, sinuous materials to re-create a visual, retained memory of movement, stimulating imagination and translating early sketches to a tactile experience.

'Duality'

All her sculptures have a vitality and fundamental energy, with an intrinsic visual interest that she feels people can relate to and enjoy and share the emotion expressed.

'Erosion'

Penny has exhibited throughout the UK since her first public exhibition of  dance sculptures in 2006, including Doddington Hall, Hill House Dartington and Royal West of England Academy. She works on a private commission basis and in recent years has completed commissions for clients in Italy, France, Belgium and America.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Fine metal artist Dustin Miller of Abstract Metal Design creates exquisite Residential, Public & Corporate Sculptures from concept to reality.


Renowned contemporary sculptor Dustin Miller of Abstract Metal Design creates elegant sculptures from concept to reality.

 

“Every sculpture starts as an original design concept. The main goal is not just to make an awesome piece of art, but to create a landmark for my clients. From shape, color and material, the metal sculpture will be just right for the space,” explained the artist, whose work resides in public and private collections around the world.


 

The 'Orb' sculpture was recently part of an HGTV Outdoor Award Winning Design for “Water, Water Everywhere Category” of the 2016 HGTV Ultimate Outdoor Awards.



In June of 2015, Ryan Hughes Design Build commissioned the artist and contemporary metal sculptor to create a contemporary stainless steel sculpture that would be part of a fire feature. The sculpture was created from 100% stainless steel, each piece had to be cut into a unique shape and rolled to a circular motion to be welded at the seems.


 
'Element' a recently installed sculpture in Virginia Beach, VA that represents and matches the contemporary brand of "Element at Stonebridge" modern apartment complex. From the colors to the design, it is now a landmark feature of the property.

For more information about this artist, or to inquire about commissioning a piece email dmiller@abstractmetaldesign.com

Learn more at www.abstractmetaldesign.com