Yee haw! Our blog has moved!

that we had to move our blog!

The title of the post that was on this page was:

Redefining Space through Balloon Sculpture

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The content that was on the original post is below (minus the images).
Sorry, but our blog grew too big for our britches and we had to make some changes. BUT, you can see all of the images on the new site: creativejuiceblog.com

I consider art as an attitude towards life which offers me the chance to explore the world along new paths and look at in another way; to try time and again to reach that state which allows us to discover the crossroads in our habitual path”.- Hans Hemmert

When you first think of sculpture your mind usually immediately floats to…clay, stone, wood or some sort of hard material. If you take away traditional thought on sculpture and begin examining ideas such as space and time as a form of art, the whole thought process changes. Modern sculpture has expanded the field, presenting itself as a situation in which to experience. Opening itself up to interaction, a new relationship with its audience is created.

Berlin-based German artist Hans Hemmert is concerned by one essential characteristic of sculpture; the redefinition of the space in which it is placed. With subtle but firm perspicacity, his visual investigation into sculptural materials has led him to the uncommon and surprising use of air as a component of his work.

Hans Hemmert is fascinated by air and he creates latex balloons, as you can see not your average kind of balloons. The artist is photographed in abstract environments obtained by filling with air a fine membrane of yellow latex inside key places of his everyday life: his home, his car, his studio. Our perception of the space changes, there is longer a clear division of the world of subject vs. object.

Subjects and objects can no longer clearly be identified or separated from one another. The new space that is created is organic, the spaces defend themselves against usage, hands and gazes slide off their formations. Through the latex skin crowding in on it, the space in a conventional sense has become meaningless – for as long as the air lasts.