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3d printed paintings2/14/2024 ![]() ![]() This piece is done “in Flowers,” and the series also includes printings in spirals, splines, curves, and other designs.ģD printing is allowing people to create images and objects that may have been previously difficult to capture. ![]() Recognize this sculpture? It’s Michelangelo’s “David” reworked in a 3D Printed Cat sponsored series entitled “7 Davids,” by designer Valeriya Promokhova. While there’s some incredibly unique 3D printed art, there’s also some more knock off work that this next series seems to epitomize. Valeriya Promokhova, “7 Davids Project: in Flowers” Maybe not so comfortable to sit in, Klarenbeek‘s chair shows how 3D printing can use natural elements to enhance the message of a work.ģ. ![]() In this piece that looks like something you may find in the same magical other world where Nuala O’Donovan’s (see above, “Teasel Grey Fault Line”) work resides. Not only is Eric Klarenbeek’s “Mycelium Chair” also inspired by organic elements - it features mushrooms. The work is part of his series “Species-Tool-Being” the rest of the series can be found here. In Shane Hope’s piece, he combines nano-structural, or small scale structural, reliefs that are first 3D printed and then painted to “reconcile the parts seamlessly.” From a great distance the work, “Public Panopticon Powder,” looks almost like an Impressionist painting, but up close it resembles barnacle pieces of coral reef. This list represents a range of styles, textures, and functions some beautiful and organic, other witty or humorous, and yet others introspective, eerie, and even unnerving. Mushroom chairs, nuclear cloud lamps, eerie ghost-like trapped creatures, beautiful shell-cone objects, and stag’s and futuristic human heads, are all featured as some of the coolest pieces of 3D printed art we’ve seen yet.ģD printed art has unique details, with 3D printing allowing for the kind of subtlety and nuance of detail that requires much less handicraft time than conventional sculpture. ![]()
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