California-born artist Tyrrell Winston's artwork is a result of years of collecting, organizing, and reconfiguring discarded objects. Winston has obsessively collected found objects from the streets of Manhattan and Brooklyn, as a public service, examination of, and fascination with the permanent energy left behind within the objects. Winston's work also revolves around drawing parallels in the absurdity between symbolism of contrasting objects. The intentional mixture of these elements examine hope and hopelessness, resurrection and regeneration, vitality and recklessness.
Read MoreWinston is well known for his basketball wall sculptures that explore the concept of embedded history and how an object's past can become abstracted. All of the basketballs in this series are found objects which Tyrrell manipulates into sculptural shapes as he links them together into a set of predetermined compositions. In an age where connections are intangible and we've lost sight of material consequence, Winston's assemblages are a reminder that the things we neglect don't disappear simply because we've moved on. His works nudge us to remember the persistent energy that remains within seemingly insignificant records of human existence.
Born in 1985 in California
Lives and works in Detroit, MI
Text courtesy Library Street Collective.