Art fabrication
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art fabrication is a process or service relating to the production of large or technically difficult artworks.
When a lone artist or designer is incapable or chooses not to realize the creation of his or her own design or conception, he or she may enlist the assistance of an art fabrication studio. Typically, an art fabrication studio has access to the resources, specialized machinery, and labor necessary to execute particularly complex projects.
"Art fabrication" should not be confused with the term "fabricated sculpture" which refers to a sculpture (usually metal) whose component parts are shaped (usually through bending), and then assembled by way of fasteners or welds (as opposed to a sculpture created through casting).
Mike Smith is a notable art fabricator who has worked on behalf of Damien Hirst, Rachel Whiteread, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Gavin Turk and Michael Landy.
[edit] External links
- Some day my plinth will come - The Guardian, 27 May 2001.
- This article about the production of a sculpture by Rachel Whiteread includes rare - for the mainstream press - details of the involvement of an art fabricator in the production of work.