has been creating miniature urban dioramas of grimy New York scenes since the
mid-1970s. His intricately detailed scenes feature complex interior views with
that takes several months to complete. The pieces are usually not exact
representations of existing locations, but rather a combination of details from
many different locations along with much of the detail from the artist's
imagination.
Alan
Wolfson never includes any people in his work, only things they have left
behind - the graffiti, the trash, tips on a counter, a half-eaten hamburger,
providing clues to a narrative. “The real impact of my work is not in how small
everything is but in the stories these small things tell,” says the artist.
Wolfson
uses wood, cardboard, paper, but mostly plastic to build his models. Anything
structural is made out of sheet acrylic while anything that is detail is
usually made out of styrene, which is a softer plastic you can cut with a knife
or a razor blade. Some of the details are molded out of metal too, like brass
hand railings, which have to be cut and soldered. Wolfson never use a magnifier
because he finds them too distracting to work with.
Sa
aveti pofta de cultura!
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