Speaks For Itself
American artist Nathan Sawaya is making art from a million pieces - and he's on his way to Britain
SIMON USBORNE - The Independent
Monet was an oils man, Michelangelo was set on stone, Moore was a gentleman who preferred bronze. For an acclaimed American artist on his way to Britain, only plastic will do. His medium: a million Lego bricks.
Nathan Sawaya has built a global following with works crafted in the blocks that have inspired generations of children. He represents the artistic end of a growing movement among adults for whom Lego is anything but a toy. His giant sculptures, many of them human figures, include Yellow, a man ripping open his own chest and spilling out Lego innards (11,014 pieces make up the work), and a blue swimmer, as well as interpretations of masterpieces including the Mona Lisa.
In its first visit to the UK, Mr Sawaya’s painstakingly constructed “Art of the Brick” exhibition, which has no official link to the Danish toy company, opens at The Old Truman Brewery in east London on 26 September. The Wall Street lawyer turned full-time Lego artist has more than four million bricks inside his studios in Los Angeles and New York. His works sell for five-figure sums, and he has filled dozens of exhibitions across four continents.
An art critic at The New York Times said of his exhibition in the city last year: “It is difficult to pass a version of Rodin’s Thinker (4,332 pieces) or see Mr Sawaya’s life-size piece Blue Guy Sitting (21,054 pieces) and not smile in amazement at the ambition or admire the skill.
“Bricks, once designed for children to build towns and buildings, are now used to evoke human shapes and brush strokes.”
Monet was an oils man, Michelangelo was set on stone, Moore was a gentleman who preferred bronze. For an acclaimed American artist on his way to Britain, only plastic will do. His medium: a million Lego bricks.
Nathan Sawaya has built a global following with works crafted in the blocks that have inspired generations of children. He represents the artistic end of a growing movement among adults for whom Lego is anything but a toy. His giant sculptures, many of them human figures, include Yellow, a man ripping open his own chest and spilling out Lego innards (11,014 pieces make up the work), and a blue swimmer, as well as interpretations of masterpieces including the Mona Lisa.
In its first visit to the UK, Mr Sawaya’s painstakingly constructed “Art of the Brick” exhibition, which has no official link to the Danish toy company, opens at The Old Truman Brewery in east London on 26 September. The Wall Street lawyer turned full-time Lego artist has more than four million bricks inside his studios in Los Angeles and New York. His works sell for five-figure sums, and he has filled dozens of exhibitions across four continents.
An art critic at The New York Times said of his exhibition in the city last year: “It is difficult to pass a version of Rodin’s Thinker (4,332 pieces) or see Mr Sawaya’s life-size piece Blue Guy Sitting (21,054 pieces) and not smile in amazement at the ambition or admire the skill.
“Bricks, once designed for children to build towns and buildings, are now used to evoke human shapes and brush strokes.”