A strong force means having the power to kneel the strongest person. What power plagues workers all day all the time. Let us last long at night as if we say that "that we are not strong enough" as if that power is impeding continuous work all the day at any time. This power is exhausted, it is the most difficult and the most difficult to conquer on the planet. When I looked at such a lively sculpture in a fast and cold art museum hallway, I only imagined the exquisite night the sculptor had to endure in order to create his very tired masterpiece I could not do it.
Duane Hanson is an American sculptor known for his surreal portrayal. Using polyester resin, Bondo, bronze, or fiberglass, Hanson's technology involves carefully casting people in life and drawing glass fiber patterns with all defects and veins of the actual skin . "My art does not deceive people," the artist explained. "This is a human attitude, I am exhausted, I am frustrated, refuse, I have beauty in all of them." His consumptionism is often a pop art movement and It is related, but it can also be associated with a humanist's 19th century painter like Jean-François Millet, an empathetic character. Life is still a normal farmer. His iconic sculpture, visitor (1970) gently encourages American clerks of storefront to blend humor and compassion. On 6th January 1996, Hansen died in Boca Raton, Florida.
A surreal sculptor, Duane Hanson, has been puzzling the United States with amazingly realistic images for years. Hansen from Alexandria, Minnesota was born on January 17, 1925. When I was young, he fixed artwork to art through crayons, scissors, and a single picture book hidden in the local library. After four different art schools, two married life, and some educational subjects, Hansen moved to New York and tried to name himself. Hansen himself does not always know his support for the success of his wife and his two children. Only in 1969 Hansen hosted his first solo exhibition in New York. There, Hansen showed his human cloned sculpture, and the dealer Ivan Cup told him that he was "famous, but not rich." Hansen sold his first sculpture there for $ 1,200. Today his work is sold for over $ 35,000 and is exhibited in museums and galleries all over the world.
With that realistic sculpture, American artist Duane Hanson became synonymous with contemporary art and modern realism. Typical motivations are ordinary people such as housewives, waitresses, car dealers, gatekeepers. Gestures and expressions of these figures are very close to reality. Photographer Gregory Kruson used this film to organize his large-size photographs and clarified the abyss of daily life behind the scenes. The curators Götz Adriani and Patricia Kamp are not directed to direct confrontation. Rather, they want to show two artists using different materials, but they deal with very similar topics. Artists Hansen and Crowson are good at arranging their art. Kruson always pays much effort on the layout of the scene in his photo, Hanson constantly pays close attention to the environment around him.