3D Cartoon Sculptures - Luke O'Sullivan
Have you ever daydreamed about living in a cartoon universe? You know, where you're high-fiving Bugs Bunny, giving some pyrotechnic pointers to Yosemite Sam or scheming up an ingenious idea with Bart Simpson? Then, you must see the work of Luke O'Sullivan. The Boston-based artist applies screen-printed drawings on wood and steel to create sculptures that look like they belong on your Saturday morning cartoon.
We love how O'Sullivan incorporates drawing, printmaking and 3D in constructing everything from a briefcase of cash to old school ghetto blasters. We caught up with the artist to ask him what inspired him to start this kind of art.
You've said in a previous interview that you like the 'the moments where cartoons/fiction collide with something from our world.' Can you elaborate?
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The Phantom Tollbooth film was another example of that. It's pretty simple, but hard to pull off. I saw a preview for that new alien movie Paul, and it’s the same principle, but based on the preview I wasn't really convinced… it just seems like displacement tactic, kind of gimmicky, you know? I think some of my sculptures can be seen as foreign objects or artifacts. Familiar, but embellished or exaggerated versions of everyday objects.
How do you choose what you'll 'cartoon' up next?
Sometimes found objects have produced ideas, but usually drawings and current projects will lead into the next piece. I like the idea of continuity through that method. Even though each project usually fluctuates in scale and between 2D and 3D, the overarching body of work feels very linear. I find a lot of inspiration through the building process. Sometimes ideas come when I’m sketching out my current project, when I’m on a table saw, or screen-printing, I think more clearly when I’m not staring at a wall or a sheet of paper asking myself questions.
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Who are some other artists that you admire? Who's pushing boundaries?
Giovanni Piranesi, Sidney Hurwitz, Rembrandt, Lee Bontecou, and Christo and Jeanne-Claude are some of my all-time favorites. The Faile boys always kill it, and Nicola Lopez is making some incredible stuff. But yeah, there’s a ton of great art that I see online every day, and I was lucky enough to go to school with a ton of great artists, too. It's a hustle though, it feels like everyone is pushing boundaries.