Beep Boop! Computers and Game Consoles Blink to Life in Love Hultén’s Retrofuturist Tech

Beep Boop! Computers and Game Consoles Blink to Life in Love Hultén’s Retrofuturist Tech

From throwback pixelated video games to science fiction-inspired computer consoles, Love Hultén’s playful sculptures (previously) harken back to the birth of digital.

Based in Gothenburg, Sweden, the artist’s explorations of video games, electronic music, and retrofuturist aesthetics continue to shape playful pieces like “R-KAID-R,” a mobile video game complete with a toggle, all of which can be carried like a briefcase.

a sculpture resembling a retro computer or device in a teal hue with wood on the sides, with dials and wires and a row of three sewing machines on the base
“The Singer”

One recent work, “The Future Fan Stage” takes a humorous approach to a fantastical fusion of live performance, science, and computers. Commissioned for Gothenburg’s Way Out West, the screen doubles as a fully functional stage that played live recordings of the headliners “for what might be the largest yet smallest crowd in history: sperm and eggs getting ‘ready to rumble’ in a laboratory,” Hultén says.

The artist draws on controversies surrounding in vitro fertilization (IVF) that have reached a fever pitch during the past few years. Taking an optimistic approach to science and modern medicine, Hultén references studies demonstrating that music may improve fertilization during the IVF process.

Hultén’s work will be on view in Liljevalchs’ spring salon Vårsalong 2025, which opens on February 14 in Stockholm. Find more on the artist’s website.

a sculpture resembling a retro computer or console in a bright yellow hue with a silver backing for numerous black buttons and dials
“Leto”
a sculpture resembling a retro computer or console in white, with a screen holding a bottle with tubing coming out of it and numerous tiny vials
“The Future Fan Stage”
a detail of a sculpture resembling a retro computer or console in white, with a screen holding a bottle with tubing coming out of it and numerous tiny vials
Detail of “The Future Fan Stage”
a sculpture resembling a retro computer or device in bright yellow with illuminated orange dials and black and white buttons
“Y-17”
a detail of a sculpture resembling a retro computer or device in bright yellow, with a hand reaching out to press a black button
Detail of “Y-17”
a sculpture resembling a retro computer or device with a hinged closure, shown open with a white surface, a black toggle stick and black buttons, and a small screen with a pixellated game image
“R-KAID-R”
a detail of a sculpture resembling a retro computer or console in a bright yellow hue with a silver backing for numerous black buttons and dials, shown with a hand adjusting a knob
Detail of “Leto”
a sculpture resembling a retro computer or device in a teal hue with wood on the sides, with dials and wires and a row of three sewing machines on the base
“The Singer”

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Matt Bua’s ‘Repurposed City’ in Upstate New York Just Hit the Market

Matt Bua’s ‘Repurposed City’ in Upstate New York Just Hit the Market

On nearly 27 wooded acres outside the town of Catskill, New York, artist Matt Bua has been hard at work on a creative compound like no other. For two decades, he has constructed an artist-built environment from salvaged materials comprising numerous living spaces and work areas. Recently listed for sale for $269,000, the off-grid property known as “B-Home” could be yours.

Bua’s project originated with the idea to “build one of every type of dwelling we could with materials that were easily at hand,” the artist tells Colossal. From repurposed vinyl records, bottles, and reclaimed wood, a sprawling “repurposed city” emerged as painted signs, sculptures, and one-of-a-kind structures popped up over time.

a hand-built shed-like structure in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials

Bua describes his approach as “intuitive building,” working in response to the natural terrain, found materials, and vernacular structures of the northeast. He wrote a book titled Talking Walls, which focuses on the region’s tens of thousands of miles of historic stone walls and considers history and material culture merge in the ways we understand “place.”

Bua lived in Brooklyn when he purchased the property. “All I wanted to do was go up there and build,” he recently told Artnet. He was inspired by self-sustaining communities like Drop City in Colorado, an artists’ commune formed in 1960 with a reputation for remarkable hand-built homes. Incidentally, he also used to maintain Catskill’s quirky Catamount People’s Museum, an installation of an enormous bobcat made from scraps of wood.

Along with a cohort of friends who have contributed freestanding artworks and functional structures over the years, Bua approached “B-Home” as a collaborative experiment “informed by the needs and desires of our surrounding community.”

Learn more about Bua’s work on his website.

buildings in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built houses, sheds, and other buildings made from salvaged materials
All images courtesy of Matt Bua, shared with permission
a hand-built cabin or shed-like structure with numerous wonky windows in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials
a hand-drawn map of artist Matt Bua's "B-Home," a property with numerous structures and artworks made from recycled and salvaged materials
Map of “B-Home”
a hand-built cabin or shed-like structure coated in bottles in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials
a hand-built shed-like structure in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials
a collection of hand-painted signs that read "Catamount People's Museum"
a hand-built shed-like structure in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials
a hand-built shed-like structure in a snowy wooded landscape, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials
a hand-built cabin or shed-like structure, part of "B-Home," a collection of intuitively built structures from salvaged materials

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Matt Bua’s ‘Repurposed City’ in Upstate New York Just Hit the Market appeared first on Colossal.