Data Loading...

Frédéric Daty | Trinity

168 Views
25 Downloads
4.53 MB

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Copy link

DOWNLOAD PDF

REPORT DMCA

RECOMMEND FLIP-BOOKS

Trinity Elder Law - November 2020

4 cup almond milk • 1 tsp vanilla extract • 1–3 tsp maple syrup, to taste • Fresh berries, for garni

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - April 2022

2 cups finely chopped pecans, divided Directions 1. Cook pie crust according to package instructions

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - March 2022

Trinity Elder Law - March 2022 Peace of Mind Post MARCH 2022 WE COULD ALL SLEEP BETTER CONFESSIONS F

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - April 2020

2 tsp ground mustard 1 tsp dried parsley flakes • Salt, paprika, garlic powder, and pepper, to taste

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - July 2020

Trinity Elder Law - July 2020 Fourth of July Traditions Peace of Mind Post T he Fourth of July is an

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - September 2020

Trinity Elder Law - September 2020 The Impact of Your Elders Peace of Mind Post A s I was thinking a

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - May 2022

Trinity Elder Law - May 2022 Peace of Mind Post MAY 2022 EVERY STORY IS WORTH SHARING THE VALUE OF C

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - April 2021

4 cups chicken broth Directions 1. Preheat oven to 425 F and grease an 8-inch square baking dish wit

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - January 2022

3 cup olive oil, garlic, salt, parsley, mint, pepper, and lemon zest and juice and blend ingredients

Read online »

Trinity Elder Law - June 2021

2 cups water. 4. Refrigerate 4–8 hours until tea reaches your desired strength. Strain and serve ove

Read online »

Frédéric Daty | Trinity

FREDERIC DATY

FOREWORD By the year 2040, more than 5 billion human beings will live in cities of all forms: urban zones, conurbations, sprawling great metropolises with difficult-to-define city limits. The ability to render a city viable and coherent will be a gigantic challenge for the survival of humanity. Humans have created ‘monsters’ hard to control… However, it is interesting to see that the living spaces created by humans are in permanent evolution, their shape and form dictated by nature itself, such is the notion of a cell and the distribution of energy. The ‘city’ becomes an ecosystem. It has energy, diffusion, exchanges of substances. It is a catalyst for knowledge and a generator for technological revolutions, both good and bad. It is a protective cocoon but it can also be a trap, limiting freedom and choice. Frederic Daty studies the relationship between a maker and his artwork with his series of wall sculptures. He studies this relationship by stripping cities of their façades and focussing on the structure, the skeleton, the core recreated from material that comes directly from the ground, raw steel, and the flux of energy represented by shadows, light and perspective. Imagining himself at the helm of an enormous microscope, he is the observer, the silent witness to the vibrant “city-worlds” with their perpetual changes and emotions left for the spectator to infer.

Daty works to recreate the energy fluxes that surround cities. He directs the gaze of the viewer to the nucleus of these forces within his sculpture, from whence the eye is drawn outward, exploding in all directions. We can find in the generated movements gently undulating curves and spirals, juxtaposed alongside aggressive shapes depicting the opposing views on the city. With a bit of distance, time is compressed and kinetic energy dominates. The hyper-mobility appears and the city becomes an entire life space for the inhabitants. While the concept of a self-sufficient city is increasingly topical, as seen in Beijing and Monaco, Daty explores the image of an emerging ecological modern city and our utopian vision of the protective legendary cities, as imagined by our ancestors in various mythologies. In the tradition of artists as diverse as Hieronymus Bosch, Gustave Moreau, Moebius, he synthesizes the dreamlike vision of a city - be it submarine, floating among the clouds or bustling with the noise and colour of merchant cities past - which are self-managing, regenerating but also eradicating all kind of individualism. Daty’s work questions the love-hate relationship between a city and its creator, amplifying the tension drawn from his personal views, feelings and reflections, and giving form to the questions that this dichotomy raises.

OXFORD CIRCUS STATION Original wall sculpture | 168cm x 94cm x 20cm

WESTMINSTER STATION Original wall sculpture | 146cm x 128cm x 21cm

PICCADILLY CIRCUS STATION NORTH ENTRANCE Original wall sculpture | 184cm x 111cm x 16cm

“THE DISCOVERY OF KINETIC ART WITH CALDER, AND MORE RECENTLY SHUN ITO, PERSUADED ME THAT I HAD TO GO INTO THREE DIMENSIONS TO FIND A REAL INTERACTION WITH THE SPACE, AND A CONNECTION WITH THE VIEWER.” - FREDERIC DATY

PICCADILLY CIRCUS STATION SOUTH ENTRANCE Original wall sculpture | 185cm x 137cm x 21cm

BANK STATION Original wall sculpture | 157cm x 133cm x 22cm

BOROUGH STATION Original wall sculpture | 160cm x 107cm x 17cm

“THREE DIMENSIONS, SILHOUETTES, CLAIR-OBSCUR (LIGHT AND SHADOW), FLOATING PERSPECTIVE, MINIMALISM AND ANAMORPHISM, ARE THE INGREDIENTS FOR MY ARTWORK.” - FREDERIC DATY

TOWER HILL STATION Original wall sculpture | 98cm x 109cm x 18cm

ALDGATE STATION Original wall sculpture | 97cm x 91cm x 13cm

CANARY WHARF STATION Original wall sculpture | 118cm x 108cm x 11cm

“IN SHORT, THERE ARE ALWAYS THREE ELEMENTS TO MY WORK: THE METAL SYMBOLIZING MOTHER EARTH AND OUR FOUNDATIONS, THE STYLIZED FIGURATIVE SHAPES WHICH REPRESENT THE SPIRITUAL REALM, AND THE LIGHT AND SHADOWS WHICH EVOKE MOVEMENT AND CHANGE.” - FREDERIC DATY

LIVERPOOL STREET STATION Original wall sculpture | 83cm x 85cm x 11cm

TIME SQUARE Original wall sculpture | 150cm x 64cm x 18cm

BROADWAY Original wall sculpture | 150cm x 95cm x 13cm

“THIS TRINITY, OF METAL, SHAPES AND LIGHT, REPRESENT “LIFE” FOR ME AND WHAT I BELIEVE IN.” - Frederic Daty

CROSSROAD Original wall sculpture | 105cm x 103cm x 16cm

VANITY Original wall sculpture | 142cm x 97cm x 16cm

BIG BEN ROOTS Original wall sculpture | 89cm x 159cm x 13cm

“PAINTERS SUCH AS CARAVAGGIO, REMBRANDT AND GEORGES DE LA TOUR ALWAYS FASCINATED ME; PAINTING WITH LIGHT, HIDING DETAILS AND ENHANCING EMOTIONS THROUGH SUGGESTION.” - Frederic Daty

LONDON ROOTS Original wall sculpture | 69cm x 111cm x 13cm

ROOT CITY ‘KITEJ’ Original wall sculpture | 117cm x 92cm x 16cm

ROOT CITY ‘MERCATOR’ #2 Original wall sculpture | 73cm x 91cm x 15cm

“AS PART OF THE ART EVOLUTION, AFTER PERSPECTIVE, CUBISM, ABSTRACTION, IMPRESSIONISM, 3D VIEW IS AN ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTIC OF THE ART IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY.” - FREDERIC DATY

ROOT CITY ‘IRAM’ Original wall sculpture | 70cm x 105cm x 15cm

ROOT CITY ‘ALGAE’ Original wall sculpture | 101cm x 116cm x 18cm

LONDON COCOON #1

LONDON COCOON #2

Original wall sculpture | 36cm x 18cm

Original wall sculpture | 36cm x 18cm

LONDON COCOON #3 Original wall sculpture | 36cm x 18cm

LONDON COCOON #4 Original wall sculpture | 36cm x 18cm

BIOGRAPHY Shared between my French and Canadian dual citizenship, one foot on each side of the Atlantic ocean, like all of us, I suffer that frenzy, that flood of images and movements without time to absorb... Confronted with an overload of images, an invasion of colours, a pouring out of futile information, my goal is to reinterpret the reality and break it down into its fundamental pieces. The medium I have chosen is a raw, primal material, without artifice and faddish coverings. I would like my work to be the opposite of a cluttered mind and soul, wrapped in superficial layers. My work contains stylized shapes and forms in an effort to be simple, clear and pure. Simplicity in the clearly defined shapes and lines is first meant to be pleasing to the eye, but it’s purpose is to make the viewer stay, rest, and contemplate the subtleties in their own lives - to enter into their own memories and reflect in the spiritual realm, things we can only do if we are still. The light and shadows also play an essential role in my art. The light animates the metal and plays with it, depending on the time of day and the movements of the people in the room. Although the metal itself is static, its surface and colour change in response to how it is lit, and gives

the impression that the work itself is also moving and evolving. However, it’s important for me that this constant change reflected on the surface of the metal is not done in a haphazard or contrived way, but in harmony with nature. There is nothing more natural than daylight; it changes rhythm as it falls on a strong element such as steel. In short, there are always three elements to my work: the metal symbolizing mother earth and tour foundations, the stylized figurative shapes which represent the spiritual realm and the light and shadows which evoke movement and change. This trinity, in turn, represent “life” for me and what I believe in. My artwork is made of hand cut steel pieces, welded, polished, finished and attached to the wall with fine stems. These pieces are then laid out to create a 3D fresco: a rebirth of the antique bas-relief with a modern, post-industrial touch. The individual elements are attached at different distances from the wall, creating volume and perspective, which, in turn, animates the stylized shapes. My work is divided into themed series or “one-shot” artwork expressing a feeling associated with one particular moment in time.

The images contained within this literature are an artistic representation of the collection. To best experience our art, we recommend you contact your local gallery to arrange a viewing. © Washington Green 2015. The content of this brochure is subject to copyright and no part can be reproduced without prior permission