• Psychic Creatures forged by Sarah Louise Davey
    ART

    Psychic Creatures forged by Sarah Louise Davey

    Sculptor Sarah Louise Davey creates unique details to familiar figures. See her interesting series below. “Through the vessel of the figure and materiality of clay, I create sculptural objects and installations to evoke intuitive, visceral responses informed by our subjective notions of physical image and societal norms. I question my own experiences of these through the various personalities that emerge with each hybrid portrait, as they are often an exaggerated mix of whimsical beauty and exaggerated macabre. Posture and pose illustrate the psychological scope of the feral female while their wide-eyed gazes portray an emotional duality that is constantly evolving within each beastly image. At the heart of these works…

  • Sculptures by Edoardo Tresoldi
    ART

    Sculptures by Edoardo Tresoldi

    Edoardo Tresoldi does not make sculptures in the traditional sense. He builds absences. Using industrial wire mesh, the Rome based artist creates figures, buildings, and monumental installations that feel present and invisible at the same time. They hover between reality and memory, like a place you swear you have been before but cannot fully describe.

  • WTF Baby Sculptures by Johnson Tsang
    ART

    WTF Baby Sculptures by Johnson Tsang

    Johnson Tsang’s baby sculptures provoke an immediate, visceral reaction. Confusion. Discomfort. A nervous laugh. The figures are unmistakable. Milky white, porcelain-like babies with oversized heads, frozen mid-action as they wrestle, collide, and scramble over one another. The effect is absurd and unsettling all at once. If there were ever a case for a genre called “crazy milk babies,” this might be it.