julho 2017 por helo
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Portugal
seen from China

seen from Maldives
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Japan
seen from Russia
seen from Albania
seen from Norway

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
julho 2017 por helo
Awesome! If only I was a famous artist and had a bunch of metal and cement at my disposal...
Chris Burden beam drop
Chris Burden, Beam Drop, 1985
For my next project, Beam Drop: Brazil, I’m recreating a piece I originally constructed in 1985. The piece is meant to be both a large abstract expressionist painting and a steel sculpture… constructed by filling in a 10-foot deep pit with loose dirt and wet concrete and dropping 100 vertically-raised steel I-beams into the pit. The process and end result are filmed. Beam Drop is a significant work because the I-beam is the building block of corporate architecture. The capricious way in which the piece is enacted – the serious, rigid, precise process and using the material, steel, in a light-hearted way – is anti-architecture and anti-corporate architecture. Not many artists have used steel. Everyone is very careful because the material has so much potential for danger.
Chris Burden, "On Beam Drop: Brazil," 2008
Chris Burden, Beam Drop
Heavy machinery sculpture.
Chris Burden
Beam Drop (1984/2008)