El Prado By The Creek - Tlaquepaque Village - Sedona, Arizona - Featuring Lymann Whitaker wind sculptures, Richard Albin rock chairs, life-size bronzes by world reknown Robin Laws, paintings by John Cogan, Tricia Higgins Hurt, Kate Starling, Robert Tanenbaum, Keith Lindberg, Jim Barker, Michael McCarthy and Fredrick Stephens.  Sculpture includes wood and bronze with art by Ed Natyia, Sally Kimp, Marty Goldstein, Robert Grieves and Don Hedin.
Sedona's Oldest Fine Art Gallery
Established in 1976
Tlaquepaque Village
Open Daily @ 10 a.m.
Sedona, Arizona 86339
928 282-7390 or  800 498-3300
 
 
   
   
   
 
Back to Bruce's work
 
Bruce Stillman's Profile
 
At the age of 21, Bruce Stillman and his stainless steel kinetic sculptures had already been featured in national media including, Vogue magazine, CBS Morning News and People magazine, attracting comparisons to artist Alexander Calder. Not bad for a young man who had managed to support himself solely thought the sale of his artwork since the age of 18.

Bruce began sculpting in his junior year of high school. His early pieces were constructed of copper and brass, and attracted the admiration and interest of buyers at local art fairs. He was introduced to stainless steel through a friend dealing in scrap metal and liked the balancing characteristics and luster of the metal for his elegant rocking sculpture designs. His high school art teacher recalls, "He was always evolving, constantly exploring new ideas. I simply lit the fuse and Stillman went off to create one concept after another. He has an affinity for motion.” The art teacher encouraged Bruce to study art at the university level. Bruce did so for a year at Northern Illinois University, then returned to full time studio work.

“I approach motion,” Bruce explains, “as an added dimension to three dimensional sculpture, and interpret my style of motion as having a lively energy, playing with gravity. I’m interested in the art of pleasant motion, a slow tranquil motion that in some viewer’s judgement, is relaxing and almost hypnotic to watch. My outdoor sculptures move with the wind. In some case, I consider them a tool for the environment to express itself, from the delicacy of the breeze to the power of high winds. Indoor pieces are operated manually by starting the bottom weight swing, while the counter weight slows the motion.”

Indoor sculptures are up to five feet in height, while outdoor pieces can be monumental, exceeding 15’ in height and 85’ in length. Precision balance is the trademark of Bruce Stillman sculptures. The mass and weight of steel, often combined with granite, are transformed under the artist’s guidance into “Outdoor 4 Swinger” 9’ H Stainless Steel delicate, graceful works that captivate one’s attention and stimulate childlike wonder. Over the years these hypnotic works of art have attracted the attention of art collectors around the world. Bruce Stillman’s works are in the collections of corporations such as General Mills, Lutheran Brotherhood Insurance, Mayo Clinic and Dayton-Hudson Corp. Prominent private collectors include movie Producer and Director Robert Altman, artist Yaacov Agam, Henry Mancini and more. An outdoor kinetic sculpture is in permanent collection of the Kansas City Art Institute.

El Prado has proudly been an active part of Bruce Stillman’s exciting career since 1979.
Copyright© 2007.  All Rights Reserved. The content of this art site is owned exclusively by El Prado Gallery [Sedona Arizona]. All artwork is the sole property of each respective artist. Any reproduction or other use of art images contained in this art gallery website without written permission of the respective artists is expressly prohibited.