Ferment
Hand Made Oil Reproduction
Hand-painted oil on canvas in your size and frame, made to order by our artists. ( Buy Print
Buy Image)
Pick from our preset sizes that match the artwork's original proportions.
You may enter your own dimensions to fit a specific frame or space. If your selected size does not match the original image's proportions, we will either crop the artwork or extend the painting with additional hand-painted elements. A digital mockup will be sent for your approval before production begins.
Please note that the on-screen preview does not reflect the actual cropping or extension. Only the mockup will accurately show the final composition.
While custom sizes are available, we recommend selecting a dimension from the predefined list to preserve the original proportions.
After order, WikiOO.org team will email client for instructions and provide a mockup preview
Worldwide Delivery () in 3/4 weeks instead of standard 5 weeks. (12 August). No compromise on quality.
Free Worldwide Express Shipping
High-Quality Linen Canvas
Full Shipping Insurance
Customs Tax Refund Guarantee
True Color Matching Guarantee
60-Day Return Policy (Defects Only)
100% Money-Back Guarantee
Bulk Discount Offer
Ferment
Reproduction Medium
Reproduction Size
-
Total Price
$ 265
Artwork Description
Related Artworks
Artist Biography
The Architect of Controlled Chaos
Born in the vibrant, bustling landscape of New York City in 1966, Roxy Paine has spent a lifetime navigating the delicate, often turbulent boundary between the organic and the industrial. His artistic consciousness was shaped profoundly by the suburban fringes of Northern Virginia, where he spent his formative years exploring the liminal spaces of the American landscape. To a young Paine, these were not merely patches of greenery, but a "twisted vision of nature"—a realm where the wildness of the earth was constantly being encroached upon and manicured by human development. This early exposure to the tension between sprawling housing developments and the resilient, overgrown thickets instilled in him a lifelong fascination with how humanity attempts to impose order upon the untamable forces of the natural world.
This fascination took a transformative turn at the age of fifteen when Paine sought adventure in California. Living alongside his brother, an avid hiker and rock climber, he was introduced to the raw, unmediated majesty of the American West. The rugged terrains of Yosemite and Joshua Tree provided a visceral counterpoint to the suburban borders of his youth, solidifying his resolve to pursue art as a vocation. It was during this period of exploration that the seeds of his future sculptural language were sown—a language that would eventually seek to replicate the intricate, fractal complexities of nature through the cold, precise medium of industrial materials.
From Collective Rebellion to Industrial Mimicry
Paine’s academic journey, which led him from the College of Santa Fe to the prestigious Pratt Institute in New York, was marked by a certain iconoclastic spirit. His struggles with traditional art instructors, whom he often found resistant to his unique perspective, fueled a skepticism toward institutional critique that would later manifest in his collaborative endeavors. In 1990, alongside fellow graduates, he co-founded the artist collective Brand Name Damages in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. This era was defined by a raw, conceptual energy, with works such as Where I’m at and Placard Flinger exploring the chaotic dissemination of information and the collision of societal impulses.
As his practice matured, Paine moved away from purely conceptual provocations toward a more profound, material-based inquiry. He began to develop a sophisticated vocabulary of forms that mimicked biological growth through mechanical means. His celebrated Dendroids series stands as a pinnacle of this evolution; these massive, stainless steel structures evoke the gnarled, twisting limbs of ancient trees, yet they are composed of thousands of meticulously engineered components. In works like Graft, displayed prominently in the National Gallery of Art’s Sculpture Garden, he presents two distinct, fictional species of trees joined at a single trunk, masterfully illustrating the human impulse to recombine and manipulate natural elements to create new, synthetic realities.
The Symbiosis of Machine and Organism
The true brilliance of Paine’s oeuvre lies in his ability to make the artificial feel alive. Through his exploration of Replicants, Machines, and Dioramas, he creates immersive environments that function as psychological habitats. His work often delves into the following thematic layers:
- The Illusion of Control: Using industrial metals and precise fabrication to replicate the unpredictable growth patterns of fungi, weeds, and trees.
- Technological Mimicry: Creating "living" sculptures that appear to breathe or grow, yet are fundamentally rooted in the logic of mass production and engineering.
- Societal Reflections: Utilizing dioramas to examine modern human spaces—such as fast-food counters or security lines—as constructed, sterile realities devoid of human presence but heavy with social implication.
Paine’s significance in contemporary art resides in his refusal to see technology and nature as entirely separate entities. Instead, he presents them as being in a state of constant, transformative dialogue. Whether he is stacking substances in the hierarchical Drug Ziggurat or constructing vast, metallic forests, his work serves as a haunting reminder of our role as both creators and disruptors of the natural order. Through his hands, the cold rigidity of steel acquires the soul of the forest, leaving the viewer to wonder where the machine ends and life begins.
Roxy Paine
1966 - , United States of America
Quick Facts
- Artistic Movement Or Style: Contemporary Sculpture
- Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Industrial Nature Art']
- Artists Who Influenced This Artist: ['Santa Fe University of Art and Design']
- Date Of Birth: 1966
- Full Name: Roxy Paine
- Nationality: American
- Notable Artworks:
- Replicants
- Machines
- Dendroids
- Dioramas
- Place Of Birth: New York City, United States



Glass option is only available in size under 110 CM