Chris Lattanzio

Chris Lattanzio (born 1963) is an American player based in Dallas, Texas.

His work, Spirit of the Downhill Skier, was included in the ascribed United States Olympic Committee gathering of the 2006 Winter Olympics commemorative art pieces. His 3-D stock works, a form of low advance that is the true opposite of an etching where everything else is taken away and lonesome the lines are carved out and lift from the surface, have afterward been exhibited at the Supperclub in San Francisco and were included in a fund-raising issue by Home Away from Homeless in 2006.

Lattanzio's 2007 Nobel Portraits for a Noble Building features 51 faces of anything the Nobel Prize–winning scientists from the Bay Area (Stanford, UC Berkeley and UCSF), along taking into consideration the largest wood portrait of Buddha in the United States, measuring 25 ft (7.6 m) feet tall by 20 ft (6.1 m) feet wide. His accomplish is included in Wareham Development's Emeryville Station East (5885 Hollis Avenue in downtown Emeryville, California), an rotate fuel research center.

Beginning in 2008, Lattanzio began painting with light. The lights bleed into the ambient sky surrounding the art itself; the LED lights and the proclaim the lights illuminate, create a pictorial wall space. His personalized 3-D extraction art, combines considering light, creating an interplay of colors and shadows.

Lattanzio's metal sculpture, Yellow rose of Texas, won second place in the inaugural Henderson Art Project in 2010

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