
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019
6 – 9 PM
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY,
APRIL 27 AND APRIL 28, 2019
11 AM – 7 PM
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019
6 – 9 PM
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY,
APRIL 27 AND APRIL 28, 2019
11 AM – 7 PM
Thomas Dambo has made a long range of different projects for various customers all over the world. Him and his crew make everything from furniture and scenography to big and small art installations / sculptures, all from recycled materials.
Thomas Dambo is an artist / designer who specializes in making art pieces, sculptures, furniture and anything you / I can imagine out of trash, also known as recycled materials. He also gives a lot of speeches about upcycling and arranges workshops for schools, companies etc. teaching people to build stuff from trash.
Thomas originates from Odense, Denmark. He has always loved building stuff and began at an early age to build treehouses, boxcars from old wood he found around his old neighborhood.
After High School Thomas began studying to become a carpenter, he though quickly became bored with the repetive work and looking for a more creative way he applied for Kolding school of designs and was accepted in 2005.
During his early years at the design school Thomas started to see great potential in all of the stuff that people threw out. He was especially intrigued by all the ply wood that was daily thrown away by constructing sites etc, and one day when he came across a giant container filled with this he got the idea for his first major street art project; “Happy City Birds”. Since then Thomas has build more than 3000 birdhouses and spread them in several cities all over the world.
After graduating Thomas got his own workshop in Copenhagen from where he started his business, while also pursuing his passion as a street artist. He is well known around the world for his large recycle sculptures and installations, his Happy City Birds project and the interactive pixel installation Happy Wall.
On a promontory in Puerto Rico Hector EL Protector was guarding, but it was destroyed by a tropical storm as well as other large parts of the island.
Hector El Protector was Thomas Dambo’s contribution to the Culebra Es Ley art festival on the island of Culebra in Puerto Rico. Hector was produced in 5 days with pallets from the local junkyard. Hector is a permanent installation that protects the island from visitors with bad intentions regarding the nature of the island. Not long after the storm was destroyed, many residents turned to Thomas Dambo to rebuild Hector El protector. This finally succeeded with a crowd-funding campaign, so that today Hector again watches over the people and the island.
The Six Forgotten Giants in the western municipalities of Copenhagen: Rødovre, Hvidovre, Vallensbæk, Ishøj, Albertslund and Høje Taastrup were the beginning and the first chapter of Thomas Dambo’s ongoing story: “The great story of the little people and the giant trolls”.
All six sculptures are made from scrap wood with the help of local volunteers. https://thomasdambo.com/works/forgotten-giants/
The project wants to bring art out of the museum, show the beautiful and often overlooked nature spots, and at the same time give an exciting and different experience.
Thomas has made projects for a range of big and small organisations including Roskilde Festival, Visit Denmark, TEDx, Arla, Museo de arte de Puerto Rico, Shake Shack, Life is Beautiful, AON and Copenhagen Metro Company.
All pics and more: www.thomasdambo.com , www.facebook.com/thomasdambos , www.instagram.com/thomasdambo
Foto: Claudia Hoppens, DE LooPERS
The idea of community dancing was born in the late seventies in the UK. At the beginning, community dance was defined by the type of audience. In addition, the charitable nature of the projects, which often targeted marginalized communities in rural areas or in the social hotspots of cities, was another feature of community dance. Over time, the composition of groups has become increasingly flexible: there are now projects for difficult young people, single mothers, the blind, etc. and more often for all these groups at the same time. Increasingly, professional dancers and amateurs are also on stage together. Generation or so-called cross-generation projects are currently in vogue.
Community dance or dance for all “it’s about giving a community or a socially or culturally defined group access to dance. Integration can, but does not necessarily have to be an issue. When several groups work together, the participants discover that they are part of a larger community that offers something new and surprising, “and that may make them see their own position in society with new eyes. Prejudices disappear by themselves when everyone is dancing, and everyone can get confirmation.
Continue reading Community Dance – If people can dance together, people can live together
I am looking really forward to the upcoming duo exhibition together with Xaver Sedelmeier at Galerie Strzelski in Stuttgart. This painting it is part of a new series and will be part of the exhibition.
“Konstruktion X”
200cm x 150cm
Acrylic, acrylic lacquer, acrylic resin lacquer on canvas
2018
“Xaver Sedelmeier || David Stegmann”, Duo Exhibition
Galerie Strzelski (Stuttgart/GER)
Opening reception: 7 December 2018 | 7pm
Exhibition: 08.12.18 – 20.01.19
Art Fairs 2019, all around the world. If you want to add a date in 2019 please contact by Email.
Continue reading Art Fairs 2019
On our last visit to Portugal, we stumbled upon some graffiti by chance. I was very excited and photographed a few of them. Now here in a mini exhibition to see: Mini-Exhibition Lagos, Portugal, Graffiti 2018