Harry P. Leu Gardens in Orlando will host ORIGAMI IN THE GARDEN, an exhibition of 13 larger-than-life museum-quality metal sculptures translated from origami.
Origami, meaning “folding paper” in Japanese, reflects the essence of creativity: making something out of (basically) nothing. Start with a simple square piece of paper. Apply the art of origami, folding the paper in a creative way to produce an elegant object—a soaring bird, gliding plane, galloping pony, floating boat, or an emerging butterfly.
ORIGAMI IN THE GARDEN, created by Santa Fe artists Jennifer and Kevin Box, is a monumental outdoor sculpture exhibition. Box takes origami to another level, transforming paper into museum quality metal sculpture through processes he has pioneered in teamwork with foundries, fabrication shops, and his studio staff. The exhibit features Box’s own compositions as well as collaborations with world-renowned origami artists Tim Armijo, Te Jui Fu, Beth Johnson, Michael G. LaFosse and Robert J. Lang. These remarkable artworks feel at home in the wondrous setting of botanical gardens, since paper originates in plant life and origami is made of paper. A personalized audio tour is available on your cell phone so that you may call in and listen to the artists speak about the work.
Find out more at leugardens.org.
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
MTBG.LightBoat.011.JPG | 4.83 MB |