"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

Video: "Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

Video:
Video: B&H Prospectives: Dance Photography | Lois Greenfield - YouTube 2024, April
Anonim
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

David Edgar is, in a sense, a fisherman. Large fish are not only hung on the walls of his own room, but also kept in museums or private collections. But this person does not fish with a rod or nets, and does not even buy it in stores. David Edgar is an artist. And he makes all the fish, as well as other marine life, from used plastic packaging.

"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

Since ordinary fish swim, if not in the ocean, then at least in an aquarium, it is not surprising that their plastic counterparts chose the Plastiquarium as their place of residence.

"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

“Making sea creatures out of plastic is still the same environmental theme. It’s as if a new form of life is emerging from the packages that people throw away”, - David Edgar characterizes his work.

"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

For about 30 years, David worked with steel, making sculptures from it, and only then turned to plastic packaging as a material for his work. The artist's garage is like a small recycling center - littered with empty bottles and boxes of all colors and sizes. “I am a maniacal obsession with collecting all kinds of trash,” says Edgar. On the day of garbage collection, he goes around neighboring houses in search of suitable material. David cuts the assembled specimens and then uses a heat gun to soften the plastic so that he can bend and stretch it to shape it.

"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

Just don't send David your own used cans and packaging. He finds everything he needs on his own. However, there is a small exception: purple plastic. The artist notes that he is very rare, and therefore if you have such a treasure, David will not mind at all if you brought it home to him. If you drive by, of course.

"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar
"Plasticquarium" by David Edgar

“When my work is exhibited, it makes people smile,” says David Edgar. - I like it when my work is described as light-hearted, funny and funny. But sometimes my creativity makes people think. Creativity that brings a smile and raises serious problems is probably the perfect combination.

Recommended: