Abstract sculpture : form as a language

This selection is an invitation to discover abstract artworks. Free of all the constraints of realism, our artists’ abstract sculptures deliver an alternative meaning, and allow us to discover new aspects entirely through its form.

Delphine Brabant

Passionate about architecture, the dynamics of Delphine Brabant’s refined sculptures are seen through her work on form and the material. The sculptures are in clay, bronze, plaster, and wood, it is through using multiple materials that she develops her poetic language.

Sharon Brill

Sharon Brill‘s ceramics take shape through a delicate and intuitive creative process. The origin of her work draws on meticulous and minimalistic aesthetics, continuously developed by a spontaneous and intuitive pursuit.

Alejandro Vega Beuvrin

Enthused by the heritage of minimalist sculpture, the Argentinian artist wanted to create artworks that embrace their surroundings. With a political aspect, Alejandro Vega Beuvrin’s abstract sculptures are first seen as “spatial drawings” embodied by the diversity of the materials used.

Tien Wen

Passionate about working shape, Tien Wen‘s sculptures exclude any idea of functionality. Their shape’s purity is bestowed using the ancestral raku technique, a method of baking clay giving the artist’s works a bronze appearance.

Mattia Bosco

Italian sculptor Mattia Bosco sees sculpture as a dialogue with the stone. The first phase is a search for inspiration, his work involves a continual partnership with the material. The sculptor’s involvement is simple, it aims to purify the form already there by cutting it, even highlighting it with gold leaves. 

See more See less

Alejandro Vega Beuvrin

To top
Share via
Abstract sculpture : form as a language | Artistics.com
Send this to a friend
Cart
Loading...

Subtotal

without shipping costs *

Loading...

* Shipping costs will be calculated based on the delivery address you provide in the next step
Checkout
Contact us

    Please complete the form below and choose how you would like to be contacted (email or telephone).
    You can also call us on +33(0)1 40 28 92 28.


    * Necessary fields