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Some sample cinema video and stills from Mt Desert Rock Maine. Scott Fuller is an FAA certified Part 107 Commercial Drone Operator.
Footage from MT Desert Rock Maine
Community Spiral is a temporary public art project created in collaboration with Matt Burnett. The spiral was a large scale winter project made with harvested ice blocks and candle flames. Each ice block weighed 180 pounds and the structure used over 250 blocks to create a public plaza. Community members including volunteers from the local low security prison helped to construct the massive ice structure located in New York. The public also gathered to light the candles and illuminate the ice structure at night.
“Wreath” is a 5’x5’ aluminum sculpture with an indigo colored powder coating. The hanging sculpture is suspended in the atrium of Saint Joseph’s College of Maine. This sculpture is in the permanent collection of the college. “Wreath” was also exhibited in the Suny Potsdam Museum of Art in New York state. The form is created using a photograph of a tree branch that is repeated in a radial pattern. The sculpture represents the power of community and the idea that communities are stronger when they embrace all who live there. “Wreath” creates a space for community to have conversations while pondering this complex visual form.
E-lumination was a temporary public installation in collaboration with artist matt Burnett. The project was created in the town of Long Lake, NY and at St Lawrence University in NY, lasting two weeks at both locations. Seven eight foot orbs were carved from giant blocks of snow created by the artists. The orbs were illuminated at night using two projectors per sphere. The imagery projected on the spheres slowly morphed and changed through the night. The imagery used on the Long Lake orbs was selected from historical images from the town, while the St Lawrence University spheres showed abstract imagery created in collaboration by the two artists. Both sites encouraged the public to come out and play with light in the middle of a cold north east winter. The Boston Globe, North Country Public Radio and the cover of St Lawrence University Magazine, reported on this community experience.
“Directions” is a 4’x4’x 7’ stainless steal sculpture sitting on a granite base. The sculpture is in the permeant collection at St Joseph’s College of Maine and is located at the entrance of Alfond Center. “Directions” is symbolic of the four directions North, East, West, and South. It is from the artists photographic sculpture body of work that takes imagery from nature, mirrors and repeats the natural form to create a new object. Below are the photographic images that are at the origin of the piece. In this case the artist used an Echinacea (cone flower) plant that was drying in his window as the photographic base for the sculpture.
The Illuminated wall is a 5’x6’x2’ hollow wall constructed of clay . It has a carved pattern, releasing light that glows from the interior light source. The wall is located permanently at the Crane School of Music in New York.
The “Solar Spheres” are located in a private collection in California. These outdoor ceramic sculptures are inspired by coral heads, ocean life and sun light. They are created with a unique cutout organic pattern that is designed to glow at night, activating an otherwise dark garden space.
Reaching for Courage, a Gateway to China was created in collaboration with Asherah Cinamon. We were invited to enter our sculptural proposal in the Beijing Olympic Landscape Sculptural design contest by Chinese officials presiding over the contest. Our design was one of 150 selected by international jurors out of 2,500 international applicants to represent the United States in a multi-national exhibition held over two years leading up to the Olympics. Our design was selected to tour to thirty countries around the world. We gave a talk in the California governors office and acted as art ambassadors for the Untied States. Our piece received a lot of press and is included in a few books in China and made the cover of the Maine College of Art Magazine. Beijing officials reported that over one hundred million people viewed the exhibition in China alone. The massive public viewing was accomplished by multiple outdoor exhibitions across China. The sculptures were displayed in the streets and always associated with a museum or governmental institution. At the end of the two year exhibition, awards were given to esteemed works in the competition via a red carpet televised awards ceremony in Beijing. the ceremony featured highlights of the exhibition, Chinese dignitaries, popular music stars and other Chinese celebrities. Our design won the prestigious “Olympic Rings Award.” Our sculpture resides in the Jintai Museum in Beijing, China.
Smoke Grid- Smoke, Fire, Hawaiian Earth Pigments, Silk Screen on Low Fire Clay, 5’x7’.
Transformation Flow was a temporary public installation in Portland Maine, presented by Maine College of Art. The installation was described as a multi sensory experience and a visually poetic space. The photographic walls were created using abstract images of fire. Each wall was 8’x24’ long. In the center of the space was a granite stone wall with charred logs and sticks creating a sculptural structure in the center of the space. The charred logs left a faint smell of a campfire, awakening the senses and memory of the audience.
“Light in the City” was the artist’s first temporary public art installation in Portland Maine. This was in collaboration with the City of Portland, the Portland Museum of Art and the Portland Public Art Committee. This project used the last mound of snow piled in front of the Portland Museum of Art and invited unknowing pedestrians to come light a candles and illuminate the last remnant of winter. This was a pop up project that was not advertised, so the public discovered the work by surprise. This piece was warmly received by the city and was the beginning idea for many temporary public projects, including the Community Spiral.
Amalgamation is a design ready to be fabricated into a metal architectural screen or sculptural element. This is a sample of many designs the artist has ready for fabrication. Please contact Scott Fuller Studios for a meeting to explore site specific sculptural designs, to meet your specific needs.