At the center of a giant hourglass, a metallic skull with gaping jaws hangs above a bowl of glistening black fluid. Suddenly, the liquid seems to come alive. Quivering dark tendrils reach upward from the bowl into the skull’s open jaws. The fluid gathers into a twisting ball of spikes inside the skull’s mouth. Then the movement stops, and the fluid drains back down in thick black streams.
This unnerving sculpture, called Killing Time, is the work of the artist Mesplé, who’s based in Los Angeles, California. For 12 years, Mesplé has created mesmerizing pieces of art, like this one, that incorporate ferrofluids. These inky black substances contain billions of tiny magnetic particles suspended in a liquid (see Fluid Components). Ferrofluids respond to a magnetic field—making them perfect for Mesplé’s dynamic and eerie shape-shifting sculptures.
A metallic skull with wide open jaws hangs at the center of a giant hourglass. A bowl of shiny black fluid sits below the skull. Suddenly, the liquid seems to come alive. Dark strings of fluid quiver and reach upward from the bowl into the skull’s open jaws. The fluid gathers inside the skull’s mouth. It forms a twisting ball of spikes. Then the movement stops, and the fluid falls back down in thick black streams.
This chilling sculpture is called Killing Time. It’s the work of the artist Mesplé in Los Angeles, California. For 12 years, Mesplé has created fascinating pieces of art, like this one. They contain ferrofluids. These inky black liquids hold billions of tiny magnetic particles (see Fluid Components). Ferrofluids respond to a magnetic field. That makes them perfect for Mesplé’s moving and eerie shape-shifting sculptures.