Dean West & Nathan Sawaya

Présentation

En 2012, Nathan Sawaya et Dean West présentaient leur premier projet intitulé “IN PIECES”. Il mettait en scène les sculptures de Légo du premier, au sein des photographies du second de façon hyperréaliste. Depuis lors, ce projet a été exposé au sein de galeries et musées plus de 14 pays, dont le Colombus Museum of Art (2012), le Faneuil Hall Museum de Boston (2015), Paris Expo à la Porte De Versailles (2015), Pulse 5 Gallery à Zürich, Discovery Times Square Museum à New York City (2014), etc. Amassant de nombreux prix, les oeuvres de cette série ont désormais trouvé place dans de prestigieuses collections telle que celle de Sir Elton John. 

 

À l’occasion d’une nouvelle collaboration intitulée “PERNICIEM”, qui signifie “extinction” en latin, les deux artistes se tournent cette fois sur l’environnement et certaines de ses espèces les plus menacées. Couvrant cinq écosystèmes (océans, forêts, déserts, prairies, et l’arctique), le message est simple: si nous n’agissant pas collectivement pour la préservation de la planète et de ses espèces, il ne nous en restera plus que simulations virtuelles.

 

Les sculptures de Sawaya sont créées, photographiées, et incorporées dans les photographies de Dean West afin d’émuler une réalité augmentée faisant référence à la croissante digitalisation de notre monde. L’effet de pixellisation induit par les Légo porte à reconsidérer le passé, le présent et le futur de nos paysages. Les effets du changement climatique, la fonte des glaciers, la déforestation, la pollution des eaux et le braconnage de la vie sauvage, ont disséminé le nombre d’espèces animales sur Terre, en poussant certaines au seuil de l’extinction. Cette collaboration cherche à interpeller le regardeur afin de nous interroger sur notre relation à un monde en constante mutation.

Série
Œuvres
Biographie

Nathan Sawaya is an award-winning artist who creates awe-inspiring works of art out of some of the most unlikely things. His global touring exhibitions, THE ART OF THE BRICK, feature large-scale sculptures using only toy building blocks: LEGO bricks to be exact. His work is obsessively and painstakingly crafted and is both beautiful and playful.

 

Previously a NYC corporate lawyer, Sawaya is the first person to ever take LEGO into the art world and is the author of two best selling books. His unique exhibition is the first of its kind to focus exclusively on LEGO as an art medium and has broken attendance records around the globe. The creations, constructed from countless individual LEGO pieces, were built from standard bricks beginning as early as 2002.

 

Sawaya is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, recognizing his artwork and cultural achievements. In 2014, with the belief that "art is not optional," Sawaya founded The Art Revolution Foundation for the purpose of making art a priority in our schools and our homes. He is often a featured speaker at events, including Google Zeitgeist, TEDx, and at the Clinton Library.

 


 

 

A wide range of environments and character types are explored in the works of New York City-based Dean West. The Australian-born (1983) artist who studied at the Queensland College of Art, is best known for his intricate and highly staged photographs that take everyday occurrences beyond the realm of natural reality.

 

In 2015 West started working with themes based around memory, recreating moments, either from stories recounted to him by friends, or from his own memories, blurring the boundaries of fact and fiction to gloriously theatrical effect. West’s style is an unusual but utterly compelling method for constructing a photograph. The results are strangely cinematic — like day-to-day situations that have had the animation sucked out of them; oneiric, fantastical set-ups that echo with old school Americana.

 

Dedicated to the vast possibilities of digital photography as both a medium and a cultural epoch, West’s narratives draw inspiration from the total diversity offered by the visual arts. While the tableau photography of Stan Douglas and Jeff Wall inform West’s understanding of photography as a form of contemporary communication, the paintings of David Hockney and Edward Hopper provide evident aesthetic direction. The fictional world of cinema and the functional language of advertising have also clearly left their mark and taught lessons of their own.

 

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