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Jude Griebel

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Jude Griebel (born 1978) is a Canadian sculptor, working between Alberta, Canada and Brooklyn, New York. Greibel creates intensively detailed figurative sculptures and drawings that visualize our entanglement with the surrounding world.

Early life and education

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Griebel was born in Ottawa, Canada. He received a BFA from the Emily Carr University of Art and Design in 2004 and an MFA in Sculpture and Ceramics from Concordia University, in 2014.[1]

Work

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In his elaborate sculptures, Jude Griebel merges human forms with those of animals, insects, architecture, and the natural environment.[2] These hybrid bodies function as stages for productive and destructive events. While addressing instances of human behavior in a broader context, these works also function as metaphors for the development and destruction of the self. In his essay “Charmed Beginnings”, Tammer El Sheikh writes:

His dioramas dissolve the outlines of humans in the landscape and offer instead the expressive parts of them. The figure of the human that results is an emergent one, groping and exploring but faced at every turn with environmentally imposed limits. Deleuze and Guattari breach the boundary between natural and human- made realms by identifying linkages between them. If we turn to Griebel’s dioramas we see these schemas expanded to describe interactions between humans, their primitive and sophisticated tools, and the natural environments those tools shape.[3]

The careful crafting of these works and their miniature details counter the central themes of hyperactive production, and on demand delivery. Laboriously carved from wood, modeled from clays, and painted, they represent hours of reflection on the meaning of being an active consumer in this world and struggling to imagine models beyond it.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Miniature worlds, big problems: Jude Griebel's artworks address consumerism and environmental degradation". artsandscience.usask.ca. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
  2. ^ Collins, Leah (Oct 18, 2018). "Miniatures that force you to look closely — really, really closely — at climate change". cbc.
  3. ^ "Charmed Beginnings". Issuu. Retrieved 2024-11-04.