Artist Information:
Bill Radawec
Parma, OH
United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
contact artist

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Artist Statement:
Art in America
Feb, 2003
Bill Radawec at Shaheen Contemporary - Cleveland
Thomas McEvilley
Bill Radawec was living in Los Angeles when the big earthquake of 1994 hit. His apartment developed cracks in the walls at about 40 places. He decided to make an art work of the earthquake damage. Ascending a ladder, carrying a drawing board, he drew each of the cracks in detail and measured the depths of the various parts of each fissure, which were between one and five millimeters deep. He marked the corresponding parts of each drawing with a number, 1 through 5, to indicate the depth of the fissure at that exact point.
Then he took sheets of paper one millimeter thick. On the first one he drew the uppermost layer of a crack and cut it out with an X-acto knife. Putting another sheet underneath that one, he drew the parts that were one millimeter deep, and cut them out. Then, with another sheet, he drew the parts that were two millimeters deep, cut them out, and so on. The drawing was done with pen, pencil and Wite-Out. Finally each crack was represented by a stack of five sheets that replicated it...
Further Information
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Artist Exhibitions:
William Radawec
BORN: Cleveland, Ohio
EDUCATION: Baldwin-Wallace College, B.A., 1974
University of New Mexico, 1975
SOLO EXHIBITIONS:
2007 Out of the Blue…, exit (a gallery space), Cleveland
2005 (A Study), raw & co gallery, Cleveland
2004 Berlitz Visual Art Gallery, New York
Sawtelle, the Sequel, Beaker Gallery, Tampa
2003 ...
Further Information
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Artist Galleries:
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Artist Reviews:
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Collections:
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Commissions:
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Bill Radawec's Free Artist Portfolio
Welcome to Bill Radawec's Portfolio. Browse Radawec's body of work:
Art in America
Feb, 2003
Bill Radawec at Shaheen Contemporary - Cleveland
Thomas McEvilley
Bill Radawec was living in Los Angeles when the big earthquake of 1994 hit. His apartment developed cracks in the walls at about 40 places. He decided to make an art work of the earthquake damage. Ascending a ladder, carrying a drawing board, he drew each of the cracks in detail and measured the depths of the various parts of each fissure, which were between one and five millimeters deep. He marked the corresponding parts of each drawing with a number, 1 through 5, to indicate the... | |
Not, FLW, 2008 Mixed Media, 5 x 5 X 1 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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Not, A Lincoln, 2008 Mixed Media, 6 x 4 X 1 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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Out of the Blue, the Turn Around, 2007 Acrylic Painting, 24 x 23 X 1 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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A Study, 2005 Wood Sculpture, 6 x 4 X 2 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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Chin Up Breathless Boy Blue Brothers Green, 2002 Acrylic Painting, 18 x 24 X 1 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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CrackUp, 1997 Mixed Media, 16 x 21 X 1 inches Request Price add to MYabsolutearts
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