Button and Pin Art by Ran Hwang

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Ran Hwang created amazing button and pin art by sticking pins through buttons thousands of times, and then organizes them into the shape of a massive bird on a wall. Each image requires the hammering of thousands of pins with buttons into a wall. No glue is used. The buttons can move or fall at any time. However, the work is only completed after the bird is surrounded, naturally, by a cage.

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“My immense wall installations are extremely time consuming and repetitive manual work,” says Hwang. “This is a form of meditative practice that helps me find my inner peace. Pins are used to hold buttons onto the surface to form a silhouetted image, or to disintegrate such image. No adhesive is used so the buttons are free to stay and move, which implies the genetic human tendency to be irresolute. I use buttons because they are common and ordinary, like the existence of human beings”.


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“By hammering thousands of pins onto a wall, I discover significance of existence,” she adds”. Like the monks practicing Zen facing the wall, my work is a form of performance that leads to finding oneself.” Hwang graduated from the School of Visual Arts in NYC and has exhibited her work in New York, Paris and Seoul”.

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Comments: 4   


December 9, 2009 - Art, Exhibiton, Latest, Paintwork, Sculpture    
Author: Shan Tara

4 Responses to “Button and Pin Art by Ran Hwang”

  1. Button Webs | ArtClubBlog Says:

    [...] well. Have a look at these links for more interesting work with buttons: Eva Kelly Lauren Levy http://www.cubeme.com [...]

  2. Rob Rasner Magic Castle Says:

    I am truly loving the theme/design of your blog Button and Pin Art by Ran Hwang by CubeMe . Would you actually encounter any browser compatibility problems… There is a handful of my blog audience sometimes unhappy with my site not working correctly in Explorer although good in Chrome. Are there any kind of suggestions to aid fix this issue In addition how about Charlie Sheen wonderful headlines!

  3. I Love Art… [today is Ran Hwang] | nabiyafly Says:

    [...] “ My immense wall installations are extremely time consuming and repetitive manual work,” says Hwang. “This is a form of meditative practice that helps me find my inner peace. Pins are used to hold buttons onto the surface to form a silhouetted image, or to disintegrate such image. No adhesive is used so the buttons are free to stay and move, which implies the genetic human tendency to be irresolute. I use buttons because they are common and ordinary, like the existence of human beings”. (cube me) [...]

  4. I Love Art… [today is Ran Hwang] | nabiyafly Says:

    [...] “ My immense wall installations are extremely time consuming and repetitive manual work,” says Hwang. “This is a form of meditative practice that helps me find my inner peace. Pins are used to hold buttons onto the surface to form a silhouetted image, or to disintegrate such image. No adhesive is used so the buttons are free to stay and move, which implies the genetic human tendency to be irresolute. I use buttons because they are common and ordinary, like the existence of human beings”. (cube me) [...]

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