Skip to main content

rebecca Lisle

Bristol
I work with salvaged wood and found objects to produce abstract sculptures both wall mounted and free standing.

These sculptures have developed from my lifelong study of botany and a love of making things.

 

All organic forms, but particularly seed heads and pods, flowers and high magnification transverse sections of stems and roots inspire the work.

 

An equally important aspect of my work is the process by which the sculptures are made. This involves cutting, joining and constructing elements by hand. Also responding to the surface, texture and tactile nature of wood, so the sculpture evolves as I work with the components. This procedure becomes an intrinsic part of the model: the finished sculpture isn't only what it set out to represent, it becomes an object where the sense of what's been done, of pieces being moved and fixed is what it finally is. 

 

All the pieces are composed of a mixture of elements, many of which I have found. Discovering a use for a discarded object brings an unknown element to the sculpture and encourages my inventiveness. 

 

On the wall the 3D nature of the constructions brings new aspects to it. Light falls casting shadows and enhancing the structural and architectural form.

 

 

 

Thinking in Broken Images

Home For Some

Dead and Mad as Nails

For Once Then Something

Colour In A Shape

The Other Side of Madness

Become a member

We support our members with: insurance, networks, space, opportunities, R&D awards, profiling, advice and mentoring.
Become a member