Among those sculptures whose forms translated to a much smaller scale, are Mobius, BackFlip and Wherever You Go, There You Are (left, in front of Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania).
“3D printing is a surprisingly organic process – it is a great tool for releasing my artistic impulses and expanding my artistic methods and fabrication skills,” says Kevin.
“It also allows me to create designs that are difficult or impossible in metal. With jewelry, it also broadened the size range for my creations,” he explains. “Now suddenly I can create in a scale smaller than my finger.”
SCULPTURE TO JEWELRY
He has always loved jewelry: its proportion; its proximity and relationship with the body; its color, the shadows it casts; and, in the case of metals, its reflection. 3D printing opened the door for him to manifest these small, delicate sculptures as wearable art.
Some of his jewelry designs actually originated as sculptures. He initially designed BackFlip (right) for a 12,000 square foot residence on the side of Camelback Mountain in Phoenix, where this 7-foot-tall sculpture still stands. “I knew the design would make beautiful earrings,” says Kevin.
Torus is a version of a design he created as a full-size sculpture in the forms of Torrent, Crimson Singularity and Wherever You Go, There You Are, which is 9 feet tall.
Campfire and Sand Dollar have yet to be created as anything but earrings, but he would like someday to fabricate each of these in a monumental size.