Other artworks by Aleks Rosenberg
Artwork details
- Medium : Objects, Wood Without Stand
- Dimensions : Length: 8in, Height: 8in, Depth: 2.5in
About this artwork
This piece is based on two premises. First is based on Alfred Hitchcock's use of eyeglasses as a prop in foretelling the protagonist's awakening to their predicament when he/she either puts on or takes off his/her glasses. Second is the magician's sleight of hand when attention is drawn to one element while the real stuff is done elsewhere.
This artwork is part of a sub-series of the shadowbox dioramas and architectural models. The partial walls… frame the stories within reminiscent of an open-air-theatre providing shelter to the staged events. In this series, the artist creates tension using hard edge geometry that merges and clashes with free form elements.
This piece, as well as this series, was conceived, and continues to evolve, during these stranger-than-fiction times.
This artwork is part of a sub-series of the shadowbox dioramas and architectural models. The partial walls… frame the stories within reminiscent of an open-air-theatre providing shelter to the staged events. In this series, the artist creates tension using hard edge geometry that merges and clashes with free form elements.
This piece, as well as this series, was conceived, and continues to evolve, during these stranger-than-fiction times.
Aleks Rosenberg
United States
Credentials
- Major permanent collection
- Established Artist
- International Exposure
- Prizewinner
- Covered by the Press
- Favorited by galleries
- Featured in gallery curations
- Works on commission
« To me as an artist, art is an ongoing evolutionary process. The more you do, the more you are prone to make so-called “happy accidents.” The happy accidents are the evolutionary parts of art that tend to have a lasting connection and stand the test of time. »
Aleks Rosenberg is a multi-disciplinary artist and filmmaker who resides in the United States and has exhibited and sold his works internationally. He received his BFA from Pratt Institute and MFA from Yale University School of Art. The central themes found in his works relate to the 'outside looking in' and the 'sun will always come up tomorrow'. For Rosenberg, there has always been tension between darkness and light, and as such, his compositions seek to find a balance between the two extremes. Working through series, he uses contrasting found or repurposed materials to leave clues for stories to be told.
Aleks Rosenberg
326 - DIVERSION
$900