LEGOs have been used to make everything from the Millenium Falcon, to the NASA Artemis Space Launch System, to a three-story jazz club straight out of the French Quarter. But what happens when LEGOs go abstract? What would a LEGO construction look like in the hands of an extraordinarily talented visual artist? The LEGO art made by Katherine Duclos would fit right in at an art gallery — and it has! Here’s more from COLOSSAL:
Duclos’ most recent solo show, aptly titled The light and color we carry, reinforces the overarching significance of color within the artist’s practice. She created her recent collection during a great shift as she moved to a new home with her family. The neurodivergent artist held onto color as a grounding force, creating connections between the specific hues and lights she would miss in her previous home.
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Having disabilities with spatial processing and rotating images causes Duclos to run into some obstacles with the diagrams and instructions that accompany the traditional LEGO kit. “I never enjoyed Lego until my son handed me four flat pieces stuck together when he was 5 and said, ‘I thought you’d like these colors next to each other.’ That was my light bulb moment,” she says. Made to hang at any orientation, each vibrant amalgamation encourages movement and fluctuation despite the stiff, blocky nature of the material.
