Saturday, 5 July 2014

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young

Fun and Random

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Sheets of Glass Cut into Layered Ocean Waves by Ben Young waves water sculpture glass

Self-taught artist Ben Young is a man of many exceptional talents from surfing and skateboarding to repairing furniture and working full-time as a qualified boat builder. He’s also spent the last decade exploring the art of sculpting with glass, an endeavor that’s become increasingly rewarding as galleries and collectors have started to take notice.

Using sheet after sheet of carefully cut glass, Young builds both abstract and realistic interpretations of waves and bodies of water, undoubtedly influenced by growing up near the beautiful Bay of Plenty on the northern coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Many people assume his work is made with the help of machines, or maybe even 3D printing, but instead everything is done completely by hand, from his initial sketches on paper to the manual cutting of each glass pane, a process he aptly describes as “a lot of work.”

You can see several more of his glass sculptures over on Tumblr, and in the video above by David Child. Young is represented by Kirra Galleries in Melbourne and the photos above are courtesy Robert Gray Photography and
Zico O’Neill. You can also follow him on Facebook. (via Faith is Torment)

 
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