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Rewind by Leticia BajuyoAt Inhabitat, we love work that gives new use to discarded items, and as CDs become relics of the past, more artists are finding ways to reuse the material creatively. Art Professor <a href="http://www.leticiabajuyo.com/" target="_blank">Leticia Bajuyo</a> is doing just that, <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/recycled-materials/" target="_blank">repurposing thousands of the shiny discs</a> into sparkling <a href="http://www.leticiabajuyo.com/cds-and-theremins.html" target="_blank">alien-like sculptures</a>. The pieces are molded into 3-dimensional forms using cable ties and hula hoops, and then shaped according to a specific theme or to the space they are exhibited.1
Event Horizon by Leticia Bajuyo, photo by Rino PizziAn Associate Professor of Art at Hanover College, Indiana, the artist has been collecting and reusing waste materials since 2009.2
Event Horizon by Leticia Bajuyo, photo by Rino PizziSo far, her CD installations have transformed discs into several meaningful exhibitions: Beginning with Entropy: a vortex of useless memory; and a piece focused on the investigation of audio called Rewind: the thinness of memory.3
Rewind by Leticia BajuyoIn the latter, she explored interaction and participation as viewers gave their own sound to the CDs.4
Entropy by Leticia BajuyoHer more recent exhibits look at the significance of the materials themselves.5
Entropy by Leticia BajuyoEvent Horizon, an installation that took place last year, consisted of two curved vortex walls.6
Dual Wielding by Leticia BajuyoConstructed from items that were formerly trendy and purchased widely, it symbolized the point of no return at the edge of a black hole. Another exhibit in 2012 was Dual Wielding, in which two horns extended from a Theremin.7
Dual Wielding by Leticia Bajuyo[gallery_extend]8
Dual Wielding by Leticia Bajuyo[gallery_extend]9









