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  • There's something just natural about the way two Lego pieces click together. It just feels

  • right. For that moment those two things are perfect and they're meant for each other. With the

  • lego you can create art, you can create films, you can create models. You can make something

  • functional. You can make something that you can wear. Everyone has snapped

  • together a lego brick at one time or another.

  • It's such a great feeling to hear that click.

  • Lego has a.lways been a big part of my life

  • It's something very tangible. It's less austere than an oil painting or a bronze

  • sculpture and because of that it connects with people in a way that I think art

  • is supposed to.

  • If you look at a computer screen it's just a bunch of colored squares if you

  • zoom all the way in. And so I thought, well, you could do that with lego bricks.

  • You can create a mosaic, so I decided that i was going to take this to another

  • level. I've done portraits of a mother and child together or a father and a child together and they're

  • so powerful because you can see the bond between a parent and a child. I need to make it

  • special to you. I need this to reflect what's inside of you and than somehow get that on

  • to the canvas. I suppose an artist working in any medium has this challenge

  • but then I only have thirteen colors to do it with. Recently I put together an

  • exhibit that's touring botanical gardens around the United States that's showing kids

  • plants, insects, birds in a new way. And I created twenty-seven larger than life

  • sculptures that use almost half a million lego pieces. It took my team and I five

  • thousand hours to put all of these sculptures together, some of which are as

  • huge as an eight-foot tall hummingbird all the way through to a life-size polar

  • bear. Now you've got kids wandering around botanical gardens that would otherwise never be at a botanical garden

  • which is also really great. Whether it's the message of what my

  • particular piece is saying to you or simply the connection that you have

  • with the piece because of your connection with lego, suddenly you've bonded with this in a

  • way that you may not have if it was perhaps the same story told in a different medium. That

  • is really special. It helps bring people out who otherwise might not be looking at art and

  • then speaking to them in a special way.

  • Every little thing you can think of, Lego has a means or a way or a shape and a

  • color to create that, if you so desire. I went to college for film but

  • I realized there were a lot of limitations to shooting live action film.

  • So the legos are just a medium for me to get what I want to create across.

  • I really really love the video game culture and I made a film called

  • Bricks of War, based on Gears of War. So I made a two minute video basically emulating what

  • it was like to play Gears of War; the behind the shoulders view,

  • the cameras zoom in.

  • So whenever I'm setting up a shot I look at every little aspect of it; the lighting, the camera

  • movement and I build custom dollies to move the camera. When I saw Call of Duty

  • Three coming out,

  • I took their launch trailer

  • and i said hey, let me try to recreate this. It was a lot of fun because it gave me so

  • many things to work with. We have a train car rolling in a

  • subway system and I

  • had to represent different countries. Right now I've been using

  • cotton balls to make explosion effects and things.

  • The little characters, they have pivots, they have joints and you can really get

  • across not only movement

  • but motion, too, with the lego. It's almost perfectly made for stop-motion animation.

  • There are films where I make it up beforehand or there are even sometimes where I

  • make it up as i go. Every film is different and it'll take anywhere between

  • six weeks,

  • sometimes it'll take

  • three months. Lego

  • opens up all possibilities. I can literally create anything I want

  • and I love

  • everything about it.

  • people can relate to lego because they have this connection to it, they have it

  • at home. I think there's something about that.

  • I really wanted to create sculptures

  • that hadn't been seen before, you know, almost take the lego element out of it.

  • There's a sculpture called "My Boy" where it's a figure holding a small child

  • figure in its arms. When I debuted this sculpture at a museum, a woman started

  • crying. She was not seeing this as a toy, she was just seeing it as art.

  • When I get to follow my passion and create art for myself,

  • it is a lot of art that's about metamorphosis. It's about transition, it's

  • about liberation.

  • There's a piece called "Yellow" where this figure is tearing his chest open and lego

  • bricks are spilling out all over

  • and people have said, is this about agony? What is this piece about? For

  • me it's about opening oneself up to the world.

  • "Red" was a piece I did about transition. You see this figure and it's emerging from

  • this pile of bricks and is he reaching to the sky

  • or is he sinking into the brinks?

  • I actually don't really reveal. I want the viewer to have a role when they're

  • looking at the art.

  • I was trying to put my emotion into my work, really create these sculptures that

  • really had something to say.

  • The fact that it's made out of lego, it opens the art world up

  • to this

  • whole new audience that may never even think about taking a Saturday

  • and going to an art museum and yet because it's made out of lego,

  • they're drawn.

  • There's nothing you can't create with lego toys and so every day is something

  • new, something different, something fun. How many toys can you really say that you

  • can say I can create anything.

  • It just has that broad span of all spectrums. We're really seeing a lego

  • art movement that's emerging. More and more artists are using lego as a

  • traditional medium and I think it's amazing.

There's something just natural about the way two Lego pieces click together. It just feels

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