Fissures
Kelly Akashi

Kelly Akashi employs new microscopic imaging technology such as X-Ray lasers and microCT scanning to record data that will be processed into sculptural forms. Trained in photography, Akashi will expand sculpture’s relationship to this technology and experiment with new methods for materializing the information she gathers by using hardware such as Desktop Metal 3D printers to achieve new, intricate metal sculptures. Akashi’s project is called Fissures.

Kelly Akashi, Body Complex, 2019, courtesy of the Artist, François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles, and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York, photo: Marten Elder
Kelly Akashi, Body Complex, 2019, courtesy of the Artist, François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles, and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York, photo: Marten Elder

 

About the Artist

Material tactility, its possibilities, limitations, and transformation form the core of Kelly Akashi's practice. Originally trained in analog photography, traditional processes and the materiality of documents continue to inform and fuel her sculptural explorations. Working in a variety of media, such as wax, bronze, fire, glass, silicone, copper, and rope, Akashi investigates the capacity and boundaries of these elements and their ability to construct and challenge conventional concepts of form.

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