Do-it-yourself paper sculptures. Paper sculptures different techniques

Many people are able to make an ordinary airplane out of paper. This is the easiest thing to do and also the simplest and easiest form of paper art. In a sense, it can even be called flying art. However, there are people who have taken it to the next level in . Unfortunately, there are not so many of them.

These craftsmen can turn the classic origami shape, combined with miniature cutting, folding, different paper cut shapes and techniques, and quilling, into the finest creative artwork you'll ever see.

After viewing this article, you will learn how these masters turn sheets of paper into masterpieces and transform ordinary paper cutting into real art. In addition, you will see all these works with your own eyes. The photo shows paper sculptures that were created by the best paper craftsmen in the world.

Jen Stark

Jen Stark is a contemporary artist. Most of her works are paper sculptures. She also draws and makes animation. Jen draws inspiration for her work from nature's microscopic patterns, wormholes, and tissue cross-sections (illustrated in anatomy books).

Up and out The opposite Coriolis effect


Simon Schubert

Simon Schubert works and creates in Cologne, Germany. His works are paintings depicting architectural objects. These are ordinary situations or objects. Simon Schubert uses white paper and mixed embossing techniques.


Emma Van List


Daniel Grein

Designer of digital and printing technology at the University of Applied Sciences, Schwäbisch Gmünd, Germany.


Elodole


Helen Musselwhite


Helen Musselwhite creates the most unique paper sculptures, from which it is impossible to take your eyes off. She uses patterns to cut paper that are significantly different from all the others. Each piece is made up of intricate, hand-cut layers of colored paper and interesting graphic paper elements that together form unusual and intriguing scenes in a framed box.

Carlos N. Monila


Olafur Eliasson


Jolis Paons

This sculpture in the form of a woman's dress is made from sheets of a telephone directory.


Aoyama Hin

“I don't stick to tradition, but I aim to create a mix of modern and traditional styles and create my own world with this super fine paper lace technique,” ​​says Aoyama.


Cher Christopher

Cher received her BA in Sculpture from the University of Wolverhampton with a Bachelor of Arts in 3D Design. She successfully passed the final exam at Covent Garden in 1992. Cher works with clay molds and paper.


Julia Brodskaya

Yulia Brodskaya was born in Moscow. Before moving to the UK in 2004, she was interested in a variety of creative techniques: textile painting, origami, collages, as well as traditional art. In her work, she often uses the technique quilling.


Original art by Patty and Allen Eckman.

Artists first mix acid-free cellulose using raw cotton, all this is laid in a mold, compressed by vacuum or by hand. In this case, excess moisture is gradually removed, but the drying process is very long. When the impression is taken out of the mold, then the finishing process begins, the most subtle. Some details are removed, some are added, due to which a very fine elaboration of details is ensured.

This is a very lengthy process, sometimes taking months of work. It is somewhat similar to the process of casting from bronze. The finished product is white, very light and with many fine details.











Paper sculptures by Calvin Nicholls. Animalism in sculpture

Calvin Nicholls is a unique artist and sculptor. His sculptures (which can be called three-dimensional paintings) are created from ordinary paper for us. Cut, glued in a special way paper forms a stunning detail in the work. Calvin, for the most part, creates portraits of wild animals out of paper - bears, lynxes, monkeys, birds and others.
Each volumetric creation takes a lot of time and painstaking work. First of all, a rigid frame is created, which is the contour of the future figure. The skeleton gives strength to the work. All other small details are already attached to the skeleton. Each piece is cut and textured with a set of metal and wood tools. During the process of work, the sculptor constantly monitors the light and shadow on the sculpture. Having finished the main part of the work, the author creates an even more detailed and complex image with the help of studio lighting. At this stage of work, all the nuances of the sculpture are brought to light.
And finally, photography.

Peter Callesen sculptures from a single A4 sheet

Danish-born artist Peter Callesen creates incredible works of art from a single A4 sheet. Through an amazing combination of cuts and rolls, Callesen creates incredible scenes from the simplest of materials.
In his own words, by stripping away all information and starting from scratch on a blank A4 white sheet, he feels he has found material that everyone can relate to. At the same time, sheet A4 is neutral and open to accept any value. The subtlety gives the paper sculptures a fragility that emphasizes the tragic and romantic theme of his sculptures.




In Japan, paper art such as origami, kirigami and similar sculptures have long become traditional. How beautiful paper crafts lined up in three-dimensional compositions surprise and delight.
Sometimes it is very difficult, or even impossible, for a non-professional to repeat them even according to the schemes and master classes. But if you really want to do something like that, you start looking for compromises. In the current search, I met the author of paper sculpture Benja Harney. Benja himself successfully uses his favorite pastime in the commercial field, advertising, mass media, so this is not a hobby for him, but a job. I really liked the idea of ​​\u200b\u200bthis creativity, making a figure in this way, in my opinion, is much easier than folding it using the origami technique.

The method is really not that hard to master. At the Faculty of Graphic Design, we made layouts in this way, with almost no attention paid to the very technique. You draw the model, then you draw its layout with all sides, leaving bends for fastening and coupling the sides. Remember that we all glued the same cube or parallelepiped out of paper in geometry lessons at school.

In design, more complex shapes, such as building models and other three-dimensional compositions, are glued together in this way. Of course, three-dimensional vision is very useful in such work, but you can start with simple shapes, gluing them together.

By applying layer after layer of colored paper, the composition becomes multi-level, volume is created, the figures become three-dimensional.

Benja was carried away by this process during his studies, the same faculty of graphic design, and now very beautiful paper models come out from under his hands. They are so interesting and neatly executed that you can’t call them anything other than paper sculpture.

Creativity Benja Harney is somewhere on the verge between design and art.

His works are original and attract attention. Big brands and famous people are showing interest in them.

For example, for the Sydney showcase of the luxury brand Hermes Benja, he made paper wings.

For Kylie Minogue's Australian tour, he created a pop-up book for her album.

Paper sculptures by Li Hongbo aslan wrote on April 11th, 2016

The snow-white sculptures of the Chinese author Li Hongbo (Li Hongbo) are unlikely to seem interesting and original to those who see them for the first time. Such plaster figurines are used in art schools, teaching beginners the basics of fine art. But they are not as simple as they seem.

The sculptor does not work with plaster, but with white paper, and his paper sculptures from the Pure White Paper series can stretch and bend like accordion bellows.


The author keeps the main secret of his work in secret, but if you look closely at the sculptures, when they are stretched, bent and twisted, you will notice that they consist of thousands of thin white leaves firmly connected to each other.

The artist's interest in paper began during his work as an editor, but Lu Hongbo's real inspiration was honeycomb, a popular paper for making children's toys or holiday decorations in China. Its amazing flexibility, stability and strength attracted the attention of the artist, and he began to use it as a material for his gutta-percha sculptures.

Li Hongbo uses a special "rubber" glue commonly used to make traditional Chinese soft paper toys. By the way, these toys inspired the sculptor to create the Pure White Paper art project.

The artist first glues several thousand sheets of paper together in a special way, after which he processes it like marble sculptors.

Children love to watch how a flat paper box suddenly stretches for several meters, turning into a snake, dragon or caterpillar. Adults can no longer be surprised by caterpillars, Li Hongbo believes, so they need something more serious. Therefore, his sculptures are not flat boxes, but "full-sized" statues, practically indistinguishable from ordinary sculptures.

But as soon as you pull such a sculpture by the protruding parts, it will begin to stretch, deforming in a funny way, but remaining at the same time a solid object. You can play such an accordion endlessly, the sculpture will not deteriorate, except that the paper may not withstand active actions, and at some point deteriorate.

The talented author's series of flexible paper sculptures includes busts and full-size figures of people, skulls and limbs, as well as fictional creatures that defy classification.

And a short video about these amazing sculptures

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