NOBA Nordic Baltic contemporary art platform

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Plastea telluris II, 2025

13 x 32 x 20 cm
€1700

recycled styrofoam, building-filler and pigment


For this work, I envisioned the soft, refreshing tones of mint ice cream, translating its color and texture into the material form. The work should be categorized under the Other section, but I wanted to include the three-dimensional measurements. This work can also be displayed on the wall, engaging the viewer with its tactile, relief-like presence. The name Plastea refers to molding and plastic. Plastea telluris: the plastic of the earth. Polystyrene is generally thought of as a difficult material to shape—crumbly, static-charged, and prone to sticking everywhere—so the hot wire cutter is often considered the only tool for achieving clean forms. Through extensive material experimentation, however, I discovered that expanded polystyrene responds beautifully to sanding, provided the process is approached in careful stages. I begin with rough shaping using a hand saw, guided by my initial sketches. This is followed by coarse sanding with a power sander, and finally, fine sanding in gradual steps with increasingly smooth sandpapers. The result is a surface that evokes stone, marble, or other rock-like substances—an unfamiliar transformation of a material rarely seen in this way. The mimetic effect is further heightened by the use of filler and pigment, which not only enhance the illusion but also reintroduce a painterly dimension to the work.


More art by this artist

Sculpture

Plastea telluris I by Mikko-Pekka Hyvärinen
Plastea telluris I  
11 x 25 x 21 cm
€1500
Plastea telluris III by Mikko-Pekka Hyvärinen
Plastea telluris III  
14 x 30 x 22 cm
€1900