Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

BoredPanda Add post form topAdd Post
Tooltip close

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Stunning Wire Sculptures Capture The Movement Of The Human Body
User submission
60.4K
105.8K

Stunning Wire Sculptures Capture The Movement Of The Human Body

ADVERTISEMENT

It seems strange, but cold, thin wires are one of the best materials when an artist wants to represent the human form. These elegant and fluid wire sculptures by Richard Stainthorp, an artist based in Richmond in the U.K., seem like dancers or woodland spirits captured in mid-stride.

Wires are perfect for imitating the muscles and curves that we associate with the human body. As excellent as Stainthorp is with this sculptural medium, he isn’t the only artist who’s discovered its many uses – we have an entire list of wire sculpture experts.

To see more of Stainthorp’s artwork, be sure to check out his website! Read on for his answers to Bored Panda’s questions about his work.

More info: Facebook | stainthorp-sculpture.com (h/t: mymodernmet)

“Wire is an extremely difficult medium to work with,” Richard Stainthorp told Bored Panda. “It is not automatically what one would consider as a ‘material’ for creating solid, three dimensional sculptures. It was the fact that it was so difficult that made it a challenge for me”

“I knew that if I could get a sculpture looking right from all angles then I would have mastered the material, however 16 years later I am yet to achieve that goal, although I’ve been close at times. It is this challenge that is my ongoing motivation”

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

“My work is all about the beauty of the human form. I chose to use more detailed female forms for achieving the ‘correct from all angles’ goal, as replicating a smooth curve and getting it right with a dense mass of wire, from all angles, is almost impossible, but a great challenge”

“Most of my male forms or ‘unisex’ forms are action pieces, where the sex, or fine detail is of secondary importance to the sense of movement, or the emotion I want to portray in a particular piece”

“Most of my work is the result of experimenting with different poses, and I have a long progression of work that has built up to the exact poses and forms I currently use. For example, female forms with highly arched backs – because of the nature of wire as a sculptural medium, it became clear over time that slightly exaggerated poses resulted in more life-like pieces”

ADVERTISEMENT

“It is something to do with the contrast between a completely foreign material and the pose itself that seems to combine to make something realistic, and because wire is such a strange material compared to, for example, clay or stone, the pose needs to be exaggerated more than corresponding sculptures in these materials, to attain that balance that makes something seem ‘real'”

ADVERTISEMENT

Thank you, Richard Stainthorp, for talking to Bored Panda about your work!

106Kviews

Share on Facebook
Dovas

Dovas

Author, Community member

Read more »

There is a beast with heart of cold stone that dashes like lightning, shreds flesh from bone. // Bewitched by this beast, I fell to my knees. My mouth babbled madness and mumbled soft pleas. // I stared down the ravenous, gnashing dark maw of a cute cuddly kitten with yarn in its paw

Read less »
Dovas

Dovas

Author, Community member

There is a beast with heart of cold stone that dashes like lightning, shreds flesh from bone. // Bewitched by this beast, I fell to my knees. My mouth babbled madness and mumbled soft pleas. // I stared down the ravenous, gnashing dark maw of a cute cuddly kitten with yarn in its paw

What do you think ?
Add photo comments
POST
Load More Comments
You May Like
Related on Bored Panda
Related on Bored Panda
Trending on Bored Panda
Also on Bored Panda