An example of this is “Brooks” an early sculpture that imbodies the simple idea of a bicycle saddle. It is carved from a solid block of wood with a smooth varnished surface. It is attached to the wall at a hight and angle that you would expect see it if it were still on the bicycle. Through its handling and the sculptural transformation, it is no longer a single bicycle saddle, now it represents all bicycle saddles.
In the sculpture ‘The elephant I have always known’ the perfectly smooth surface and unexpected green colour isolates the object. The elephant stands alone in its own world on a plateau of the same colour. The sculpture has gone through the same process of refinement and reduction. As a result, it is materialized and at the same time highly conceptualized. This means it overcomes having a specific history or ideology, instead it tells a universal story that resonates with our own experiences and expectations. It is the elephant I have always known.