Sophie Coryndon, Honeymoon, UK, 2016
Honeymoon, a cast bronze sphere with a honeycomb texture, is the first in a series based on eighteenth-century witch balls. Spinning like a disco mirror ball, Honeymoon is suspended and lit from within using LED lights. It rotates on a vertical axis, producing a pattern of lights when lit internally and reflecting its intricate texture when lit externally. Coryndon became interested in bees after learning about the current global crisis facing the insects. In an effort to capture abandoned โghost ship hives,โ Coryndon employs the lost-wax method, an ancient and labor-intensive technique. As the artist works on a commission basis, Honeymoon may be scaled up or down and patinated in any combination of metal colors. Exhibited on its own or in a group, Honeymoon is a mesmerizing work.
Sophie Coryndon combines traditional decorative arts techniques with modern innovation. Material and process driven, she employs multiple disciplines including bronze casting, painting, embroidery, and sculpture to capture elements of the natural world, rooted in historical aesthetics.ย โBasically, Iโm drawn to craftsmanship in any form, especially dying crafts,โ says the artist, โBut I like to take those things and re-imagine them.โ
Inspired by close observation, Coryndonโs work illuminates what is often overlooked.ย ย Her enthusiasm for the organic intricacies ever-present in the macrocosm drives her tenacious ambition to transfigure the microscopic into the monumental. This practice of maximalism fosters her desire to, as she states โtake things further, make them larger, make them grander, right to the point of lunacy. Insane beauty is what Iโm ultimately after.โ
As Coryndon works on a commission basis, custom works may be requested.
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