Boxxie-Head

Abstract Art Generated by Quasicrystal Diffraction Patterns of Quasicrystals
Abstract Art Generated by Quasicrystal Diffraction Patterns of Quasicrystals
Ts Verly Veto Vermol
Zuraidy Abd Rahim
Khairul Nizan Mohd Aris

“Boxxie-Head” is a cardboard artwork commemorating the loss of species of the Sumatran rhino that once roamed the foothills and rainforests in Asia. The species was offi cially declared extinct in the wild of Malaysia in August 2015. A distinctive kind of art known as ‘sculpture’ can beautifully and meaningfully encapsulate the essence of an occasion. Cardboard sculpture denotes artworks made from different types of this material and is beyond the apparent call for recycling. It is repurposing the cardboard waste into something through a moving process.


The artists studied the strength and dynamic of cardboard through its corrugated structure and design performance to measure and calculate subject proportions and settings through space and size. The artists understand bone structure through science and how skin and fats respond to posture. It gives them several renditions of vague ideas contemplating subject weight and properties.


The artwork is a group initiative of three academicians from the Ceramic
Department, College of Creative Arts, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam. They recognise the importance of art, innovation and the power of science to shape the world. By adding arts to science, the artists embrace the overall learning experience creatively.

Category: Visual Art