Symbols and Colourful Motifs Inscribe Tomàs Barceló’s Fragmented Steampunk Sculptures — Colossal

Artwork
#artwork historical past
#clay
#sculpture
#steampunk
#Tomàs Barceló
“Auk Morai R,” clay, plaster, and resin. All photos © Tomàs Barceló, shared with permission
Following a sequence of incredible steampunk busts, Tomàs Barceló continues to sculpt figures that infuse classical foundations with otherworldly, mechanical visions. The Cala Millor, Mallorca-based artist shapes faces and limbs from fragmented shards of ceramic and plaster, which are sometimes cloaked with symbols, patterns, and filigree rendered in shellac, acrylics, and chalk and iron paints. Barceló is broadly involved with establishing a novel presence in his works, which are inclined to confront the viewer with a steadfast stare or calm, religious aura, and every sculpture seems as a relic from a futuristic previous.
The artist generously shares a timelapse of the method behind the polychromatic tomb-like work “Naar Keizar” proven under, together with different behind-the-scenes glimpses on YouTube. Discover a bigger archive of his sculptures on his web site and Instagram.

Element of “Auk Morai R,” clay, plaster, and resin

“Morai Kera,” clay plaster, resin, shellac, chalk paint, acrylics, and iron paint

Element of “Erin Llull”

“Naar Keizar,” clay, resin, shellac, and acrylic paint

Element of “Morai Kera,” clay plaster, resin, shellac, chalk paint, acrylics, and iron paint

“Erin Llull”
#artwork historical past
#clay
#sculpture
#steampunk
#Tomàs Barceló
Do tales and artists like this matter to you? Turn into a Colossal Member at the moment and assist impartial arts publishing for as little as $5 per 30 days. You will join with a group of like-minded readers who’re captivated with up to date artwork, learn articles and newsletters ad-free, maintain our interview sequence, get reductions and early entry to our limited-edition print releases, and rather more. Be a part of now!