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Amazing Set up Symbolizes Life in Abstract Patterns

Artist Laurie Frick says that figures are abstract ideas and our identification of a design is user-friendly. We have the ability to sense something is repeating and regularity, but are taught numerals.
Despite the convenience in which we understand styles, our lifestyles are recorded with numbers, like how long the commute to work takes, or the amount of money spent on lunch. Instead of showing activities in figures, Frick tests with styles that indicate the condition of our everyday selves, something she calls “human data portraits.” Using 3D printing and laser device blades, complex styles are designed in timber and revoked from ceiling in this installation named Walking, Eating, Sleeping.

Frick’s art is padded and placed, presenting styles wrapped in rectangle-shaped arrangements. They differ by piece and abstractly illustrate how categories of people experience things in a day. Walking, for example, looks like a map of a town, with gridded streets and categories of buildings. The perform is installed at different levels and directions, referencing several lifestyles and timeframes. They are a visible history of how we feel, our level of stress, and feelings. The result of Frick’s results generate wonderful cutouts that are experienced both intellectually as well as aesthetically.

Laurie Frick Walking Eating Sleeping






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