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Ron Mueck Art 



 

 
 
Tags:  art  body  people  big 
Views:  2657
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Published:  September 28, 2007
 
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Slide 1: Ron Mueck /hyperrealism Art/
Slide 5: Boy
Slide 7: Head of a Baby, 2003 Baby, 2002
Slide 8: Ghost, 1998
Slide 10: Mask, 1997
Slide 11: Angel,1997
Slide 14: Two Woomen, 2005
Slide 15: Hillari Clinton
Slide 18: Pinnocchio, 1996
Slide 19: Mask II, 2001
Slide 21: Wild Man, 2005
Slide 23: • Mueck, Ron (1958- ) Ron Mueck is a London-based photo-realist artist. Born in Melbourne, Australia, to parents who were toy makers, he labored on children’s television shows for 15 years before working in special effects for such films as “Labyrinth,” a 1986 fantasy epic starring David Bowie. Muek then started his own company in London, making models to be photographed for advertisements. He has lots of the dolls he made during his advertising years stored in his home. Although some still have, he feels, “a presence on their own,” many were made just to be photographed from a particular angle—”one strip of a face,” for example, with a lot of loose material lurking an inch outside the camera’s frame. Eventually Mueck concluded that photography pretty much destroys the physical “presence” of the original object, and so he turned to fine art and sculpture. In the early 1990s, still in his advertising days, Mueck was commissioned to make something highly realistic, and was wondering what material would do the trick. Latex was the usual, but he wanted something harder, more precise. Luckily, he saw a little architectural decor on the wall of a boutique and inquired as to the nice, pink stuff’s nature. Fiberglass resin was the answer, and Mueck has made it his bronze and marble ever since. In the three years since his participation in Sensation: Works from the Saatchi Collection, Mueck has posted shows at major galleries in New York, Germany, not to mention selection for the London Millenium Dome and now his work is the subject of a solo exhibition at that city’s highest profile contemporary art space, Anthony d’Offay gallery

   
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