Very nice example for being Innovative.
This is the man that converts parts of cars scrapped sculptures worth thousands of dollars. The Australian artist James Corbett, 46-year-old creates these sculptures using salvaged old car parts.
One of the pieces, a ram of spark plug, sold for a whopping $23,000
His sculptures are made of gears, spark plugs, exhaust, radiator, anything that the artist can achieve.
After spending weeks dedicated to locate suitable pieces, James meticulously cleaned every part and welds them together.
He said: "I was working in a warehouse of scrap and type I know, that ran races stock cars, showed me a Trophy winner fact with levers of change." "I looked at it and I thought that I could do a much better job so I started making my own sculptures."
"After a period of time, people began to become more and more in what I was doing and now what do I win me life, is a dream come reality."
"On average, each piece takes a little over two weeks of work, but the larger pieces can take much longer”, he says.
James says that welding and the sculpture of the parts is not the part that consumes most time of the artist. "Often the longest part of the process is finding old parts suitable for sculpture."
The sculptor is exhibiting his work in the Gallery John Davies
in Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire , England , until December 19.
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Creative activity could be described as a type of learning
process where teacher and pupil are located in the same individual."
These items below were all fabricated from junk 1950 and 1960 automobile parts by a gentleman in Argentina .
James Corbett uses remnants of old cars of the 1950s and ' 60s.
James Corbett uses remnants of old cars of the 1950s and ' 60s.
This is the man that converts parts of cars scrapped sculptures worth thousands of dollars. The Australian artist James Corbett, 46-year-old creates these sculptures using salvaged old car parts.
One of the pieces, a ram of spark plug, sold for a whopping $23,000
After spending weeks dedicated to locate suitable pieces, James meticulously cleaned every part and welds them together.
He said: "I was working in a warehouse of scrap and type I know, that ran races stock cars, showed me a Trophy winner fact with levers of change." "I looked at it and I thought that I could do a much better job so I started making my own sculptures."
"After a period of time, people began to become more and more in what I was doing and now what do I win me life, is a dream come reality."
"On average, each piece takes a little over two weeks of work, but the larger pieces can take much longer”, he says.
Corbett lives in Ningi , Queensland , Australia with his wife Jodie.
Sculptures using pieces of old cars; the French and British cars are James’ favorites to retrieve.
James says that welding and the sculpture of the parts is not the part that consumes most time of the artist. "Often the longest part of the process is finding old parts suitable for sculpture."
"My two favorite pieces I've created for this exhibition are the ram and the wild boar,” he says.
Pretty darn cool, his art style is extremely unique . I don't think I'll ever possess half the craftsmanship it requires to do anything like this. I love that the scrap metal looks so artistic and not just... Auto parts.
ReplyDelete-David Enabulele
Atlanta Junk Cars