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Dutch Baseball: Artist Peter Schuyff Carves Old Baseball Bats Into Extraordinary Spiraling Sculptures

03/09/2012
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  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    Baseball may be the great American pastime, but Dutch <a href="http://www.schuyff.com">sculptor Peter Schuyff</a>'s stunning baseball bat sculptures bring a whole new dimension to the sport. For his "<a href="http://www.schuyff.com/bats-02.php">Dutch Baseball</a>" series, Schuyff spent days carefully carving away at old bats, transforming them into spiraling works of art. Read on for a closer look and an interview with the artist!
    1
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    Schuyff originally started <a href="http://www.schuyff.com/pencils-01.php">carving ornate shapes on to pencils</a>, but after a trip to New Guinea transplanted his passion onto larger pieces of wood.
    2
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    To date, Schuyff has carved about twenty bats, fifteen big logs, eight smaller ones and around three hundred pencils.
    3
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    To carve a pencil takes about half an hour, but a full bat takes a whole day.
    4
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    Generally, the sculptures end up with half of the wood becoming fragrant cedar shavings.
    5
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    Schuyff originally started carving ornate shapes on to pencils, but after a trip to New Guinea transplanted his passion onto larger pieces of wood.
    6
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    Speaking to Inhabitat, Schyuff said: "A few years ago, I took a very long walk into the highlands of New Guinea. At night, while camped out during the trek, I noted that there was not a lot to do. It was too dark to read and I shared very little language with the locals, so I sat by the fire and whittled branches."
    7
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    "I carved them into the same helix and corkscrew shapes as the bats. I suppose those shapes were right because I could carve them by feel. I sort of held the knife stable and turned the sticks over and over. They almost carved themselves."
    8
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    "In Vancouver, I had access to beautiful yellow cedar logs so I continued carving. I was always on the lookout for wood that I could carve, pencils, logs, broomsticks and so on. Then one day, I carved a bat and it was perfect."
    9
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    "I started carving a bunch of them. The carved bats as a group are called "Dutch Baseball". This is because one day I was crossing the street with five or six finished bats over my shoulder and a guy in a car waiting for the light to change asked me "Hey what kind of bats are those?"" <br> <br> "Without skipping a beat, I said: "Dutch baseball." I don't know where that came from, it just dropped out of my mouth and has stuck."
    10
  • Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff
    <big><a href="http://www.schuyff.com">+ Peter Schuyff</a></big>
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Recycled Baseball Bat Sculptures by Peter Schuyff

Baseball may be the great American pastime, but Dutch sculptor Peter Schuyff's stunning baseball bat sculptures bring a whole new dimension to the sport. For his "Dutch Baseball" series, Schuyff spent days carefully carving away at old bats, transforming them into spiraling works of art. Read on for a closer look and an interview with the artist!

READ MORE...
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Categories:  Art, Design, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
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