Steve Brudniak

Steve Brudniak (Born April 9, 1961, Topeka, Kansas) is an American artist known for highly crafted and unusual assemblage sculpture. His art incorporates, often pioneering, unconventional media and scientific elements such as high voltage electricity, Tesla coil technology, magnetic ferrofluid, gyro mechanics, biological preservations, fiber optics, and lasers.

Steve Brudniak and Noumenon sculpture, 2005

Brudniak incorporates disparate found objects in the construction of his art, however the finished pieces do not resemble collage. His assemblages generally give the appearance of being functional machines or ritualistic objects that are indivisibly "of a piece," albeit of indiscernible origin and purpose. Spirituality, psychology, and biology are common themes in his work.

Noumenon Objectifying in Four Parts 2005, assemblage with emanating reflection optical lens, 48” x 19” x 6” (collection of Dr. Donovan and Catarina Sigerfoos, Austin, Texas)

In 2008 his Astrogeneris Mementos became the first assemblage sculptures in outer space, taken aboard the International Space Station by entrepreneur and astronaut Richard Garriott.

Brudniak spent his elementary and high school years in Houston, Texas. His earliest outlets for artistic expression included writing, acting, music and film projects. In 1981 he opened the Victorian Recording Studio in Houston, recorded and performed in bands, and simultaneously began building his first assemblages. During the 1980s Brudniak was an active member of the Houston Alternative Art scene. In 1988 Brudniak moved to Austin, Texas where he remains committed to his art. He has worked from his Bouldin Creek, Austin, Texas studio for over two decades, producing art that has been exhibited in over 100 gallery and museum exhibitions. Brudniak's work is included in the collections of the San Antonio Museum of Art, the El Paso Museum of Art, The Art Museum of South Texas at Corpus Christi, and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. The monograph, The Science of Surrealism - Assemblage Sculpture of Steve Brudniak, was published in 2013 documenting thirty years of the artists career in photos, essays and commentary, edited by Anjali Gupta with a foreword by Guillermo Del Toro.

Brudniak remains active in a variety of art mediums including performance, music and filmmaking. He has appeared in documentary productions as well as feature films, most notably Richard Linklater's Waking Life. His latest film project, in the editing stage as of February 2010, is Eric Frodsham's More Moments The Go. Shot in Austin, Texas in 2009, Brudniak is co-director and co-producer of the film.

The Vagus Leviathan, Steve Brudniak, 2008, assemblage with photograph, fiber optic lens and kinetic mechanism, 50” x 21” x 6” (collection of the artist)

Selected bibliography

Gupta, Anjali. (Editor.) 2013. The Science of Surrealism: Assemblage Sculpture of Steve Brudniak. Merrid Zone. Austin TX. 196 pp.

Branwyn, Gareth, “Techno-Temporal Mash-Ups and Bringing the Tinfoil,” Device, Volume 2: Reconstructed, IDW Publishing (August 2009)

Brenner, Wayne Allen, “Steve Brudniak: Noumenon,” Austin Chronicle (June 19, 2008)

Greene, Alison de Lima, Texas: 150 Works from The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Harry N. Abrams (October 2000)

Paris, Wendy, "Houston, Texas Review," Sculpture (July/August 1994)

McBride, Elizabeth, "Steve Brudniak at Lynn Goode," ARTnews (April 1992)

Goddard, Dan R., "UT Exhibition Traces a Century of Change in Texas Sculpture," San Antonio Express-News (July 30, 1989)

Hendricks, Patricia D. and Reese, Becky Duval, A Century of Sculpture in Texas, 1889-1989, University of Texas Press (June–August 1989)

Kutner, Janet, "A Century of Sculpture in Texas," Dallas Morning News (June 20, 1989)

External links

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