Tom Friedman PRICE CHARTS
Born 1965 St. Louis, Missouri. Known for: Sculptor-conceptual, everyday object.
Tom Friedman, conceptual artist, uses everyday materials including sugar cubes, soap powder, toothpicks, construction paper, spaghetti, bubble gum, hair, tooth paste, and toilet paper. Friedman, who... Read full biography
Tom Friedman, conceptual artist, uses everyday materials including sugar cubes, soap powder, toothpicks, construction paper, spaghetti, bubble gum, hair, tooth paste, and toilet paper. Friedman, who rarely titles his work, employs a labor-intensive technique related to process art, and creates... Read full biography
Tom Friedman, conceptual artist, uses everyday materials including sugar cubes, soap powder, toothpicks, construction paper, spaghetti, bubble gum, hair, tooth paste, and toilet paper. Friedman, who rarely titles his work, employs a labor-intensive technique related to process art, and creates humorous and elemental works out of . materials that typically don't get human attention. For instance, a glob of bubble gum is stuck to the floor and stretched to the ceiling. In one piece, . thousands... Read full biography
Tom Friedman, conceptual artist, uses everyday materials including sugar cubes, soap powder, toothpicks, construction paper, spaghetti, bubble gum, hair, tooth paste, and toilet paper. Friedman, who rarely titles his work, employs a labor-intensive technique related to process art, and creates humorous and elemental works out of . materials that typically don't get human attention. For instance, a glob of bubble gum is stuck to the floor and stretched to the ceiling. In one piece, . thousands of words written on paper become an abstract design, and in . another, a piece of styrofoam is reduced to dust and then sculpted into an . improbably thin, gravity-defying tower. Friedman's search for meaning in the ordinary broadens themes begun . in... Read full biography
Tom Friedman, conceptual artist, uses everyday materials including sugar cubes, soap powder, toothpicks, construction paper, spaghetti, bubble gum, hair, tooth paste, and toilet paper. Friedman, who rarely titles his work, employs a labor-intensive technique related to process art, and creates humorous and elemental works out of . materials that typically don't get human attention. For instance, a glob of bubble gum is stuck to the floor and stretched to the ceiling. In one piece, . thousands of words written on paper become an abstract design, and in . another, a piece of styrofoam is reduced to dust and then sculpted into an . improbably thin, gravity-defying tower. Friedman's search for meaning in the ordinary broadens themes begun . in the 60s and 70s with pop art, minimalism, process art and conceptual art. Of a fall 2000 exhibition of his work at th... Read full biography
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