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About the Author
Steven Heller is the cofounder and the cochair of the MFA Designer as Author program at the School of Visual Arts. He writes the Visuals column for the New York Times Book Review and the Graphic Content blog for T-Style; is editor of AIGA Voice; and is a contributor to Design Observer. He is the author, coauthor, and/or editor of more than 120 books on design and popular culture, including the forthcoming Born Modern: The Life and Design of Alvin Lustig (Chronicle Books). More information can be found at his homepage.
 
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Robotniks Doing the Can Can

by Steven Heller
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David Lipson takes other people’s trash and turns it into robot sculptures which he sells on Etsy to great success. He makes them  in a studio apartment in New York.

“They are made from materials old and new,” says Lipson, “and are located in places such as The Salvation Army, on the street, retail stores, construction sites, garbage dumps, recycle shops, pretty much anywhere. Materials most frequently used are steel, metal, glass, and plastics such as Bakelite. Drilling, cutting, sanding, twisting, and sometimes a hammer are the methods used when fabricating the pieces for assemblage. I use nuts and bolts to put them together. I don’t weld.”

Each Robot found here is one-of-a-kind and they vary in size from 7 inches to 30 inches tall. They can be heavy too, with some pieces weighing as much as 20 lbs. Lamps and radios that are sometimes used are often functional, “but currently none of the meters are operational,”  he adds.

Go here for his wonderful website.
 
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Reader Comments
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These are hands down the coolest robot sculptures I have seen yet. Very retro. Props for making something so beautiful and unique from objects found in unconventional places.
By lilo7  August 18, 2010 
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