Damon Drummond aka Ultrajunk: Found Object Art

even-robots-get-the-blues-ultrajunk

Damon Drummond aka Ultrajunk is a found object metal artist from Akron, Ohio, USA.  His passions are robots, rayguns, lamps, and anything with a vintage science fiction or future Victoran style. From kitchen stove burners, bicycle headlights, old table legs,  and other odds and ends, Drummond’s creations depend entirely on his daily finds at the scrap yard.

“I am lucky to live very close to 2 salvage scrap yards which I visit every day and scrounge through piles of salvaged metal and rusty goodness. You would not believe what gets scrapped. There is new junk every day so I never get tired of going there.”

To see more Ultrajunk, visit Damon’s photostream on Flickr.

Related Books:
Altered Curiosities: Assemblage Techniques and Projects

Secrets of Rusty Things: Transforming Found Objects into Art
Found Object Art II

Sources: Junk Market Style

Nemo Gould: Sculpture

Praying Mantis - Nemo Gould

Recently, I stumbled upon the wonderfully amusing found object and kinetic sculptures of Nemo Gould. Born to artist parents in 1975, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Gould has been creating his odd creatures and abstract sculptures from old vacuum cleaners, kitchen pots, gasoline pumps, and whatever else he can get his hands on, for more than 20 years.

Named after the protagonist in Windsor McKay’s comic strip “Little Nemo in Slumberland,” Gould’s work has fittingly evolved to reflect the images and mythology of comic books and Science Fiction. Equally as fitting is his tendency  to collect and dismantle anything with moving parts. 

Gould  has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Kansas City Art Institute and a Masters of Fine Arts from U.C. Berkeley. After graduation,  he quickly threw himself into the pursuit of his childhood dreams.  “My work appeals to the 7-year-old boy mind, because I still have one… I take silly very seriously.”

Over his career, Gould has produced a prolific body of work that attempts to reconcile the innocent wonder of youth with the dull complexity of the adult experience.  “Most adults are dangerously lacking in wonder.  As we age and learn more of the answers to life’s mysteries, I think we lose part of what keeps us alive.  When I am working, I am always trying to make things that can produce a child like response from a jaded adult—it’s a matter of life and death!”

Gould has exhibited in numerous galleries and museums across the United States and abroad and has been featured often in national media, including Wired and Juxtapoz magazines.

To see more of Nemo Gould’s work and to watch video of his sculptures in action, visit Nemomatic.com.

psychos-o-matic-2009-nemo-gould Skittish - Nemo Gould above-it-all-nemo-gould

hiwheel-nemo-gould Little Big Man - Nemo Gould Little Big Man (Detail) - Nemo Gould