Thomas van Loon - onbegrensd






Studied art history at Ecole du Louvre and specialised in contemporary art for over 25 years.
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Sculpture by Thomas van Loon titled onbegrensd, a mixed‑media work in bronze‑coloured resin and wood, measuring 34 × 15 × 15 cm and hand‑signed, from the Netherlands, in good condition.
Description from the seller
Thomas van Loon (born 1994)
is a Dutch visual artist who lives and works in the Netherlands. His practice deliberately moves beyond the boundaries of classical sculpture. Although his work often appears sculptural, it arises from a hybrid process in which analogue actions, experimental materials and contemporary techniques come together.
In his work Van Loon investigates the human figure as a carrier of inner tension, vulnerability and stillness. The figure does not function as an anatomical starting point, but as a conceptual and physical condensation of mental and bodily states. His sculptures sit at the threshold between figuration and abstraction and are characterized by a sober, concentrated formal language.
Van Loon works with a wide palette of materials and techniques, including plaster, textile, wood, synthetic carriers, digital preparation and mixed media. New technologies and contemporary making processes are not deployed as an end in themselves, but as means to give form to fragile, bodily presence. Traditional manual interventions combine effortlessly with contemporary techniques; the work is as much constructed as formed.
The skin of his sculptures is never smooth or finished. It bears traces of processing, fractures, constrictions and layering. These visible interventions refer to time, memory and bodily experience. The surface functions as a carrier of history, in which control and chance alternate.
At the heart of Van Loon’s oeuvre is the human being as a fragile and bounded entity. Figures are often enclosed, enveloped or partially removed from their own body. This enveloping is not an image of violence, but a metaphor for inner limitation, silence and introspection. His work balances between tension and surrender, between holding on and letting go.
The head plays a recurring role and is regularly recognizable or developed with clarity, while the body dissolves into abstract volumes, constructions or textile structures. This tension emphasizes the gap between thinking and feeling, between identity and corporeality, between control and vulnerability.
Van Loon works slowly and with great care. His studio is not a production space, but a place of research, repetition and reflection. Works emerge over a long period through a process of adding, removing and reinterpreting. Chance is given space, but is continually questioned and corrected.
His sculptures are not narrative, but existential. They invite silence and prolonged observation. In a time of visual abundance, Van Loon consciously chooses restraint, concentration and delay. The works function not only as objects, but as physical presence in the space—almost as quiet bodies, or quiet witnesses.
Development and recognition
Since the beginning of his professional practice, Thomas van Loon has been gaining increasing attention within the contemporary art context. His work is valued for its substantive consistency, material sensitivity and contemporary approach to sculptural form. Critics praise his ability, with minimal means, to evoke maximal physical and emotional intensity.
Thomas van Loon continues to deepen his practice around the human figure and the tension between body, technology and inner experience. His work forms a quiet but powerful countervoice within contemporary visual art—a invitation to attention, bodily awareness and delay.
Thomas van Loon (born 1994)
is a Dutch visual artist who lives and works in the Netherlands. His practice deliberately moves beyond the boundaries of classical sculpture. Although his work often appears sculptural, it arises from a hybrid process in which analogue actions, experimental materials and contemporary techniques come together.
In his work Van Loon investigates the human figure as a carrier of inner tension, vulnerability and stillness. The figure does not function as an anatomical starting point, but as a conceptual and physical condensation of mental and bodily states. His sculptures sit at the threshold between figuration and abstraction and are characterized by a sober, concentrated formal language.
Van Loon works with a wide palette of materials and techniques, including plaster, textile, wood, synthetic carriers, digital preparation and mixed media. New technologies and contemporary making processes are not deployed as an end in themselves, but as means to give form to fragile, bodily presence. Traditional manual interventions combine effortlessly with contemporary techniques; the work is as much constructed as formed.
The skin of his sculptures is never smooth or finished. It bears traces of processing, fractures, constrictions and layering. These visible interventions refer to time, memory and bodily experience. The surface functions as a carrier of history, in which control and chance alternate.
At the heart of Van Loon’s oeuvre is the human being as a fragile and bounded entity. Figures are often enclosed, enveloped or partially removed from their own body. This enveloping is not an image of violence, but a metaphor for inner limitation, silence and introspection. His work balances between tension and surrender, between holding on and letting go.
The head plays a recurring role and is regularly recognizable or developed with clarity, while the body dissolves into abstract volumes, constructions or textile structures. This tension emphasizes the gap between thinking and feeling, between identity and corporeality, between control and vulnerability.
Van Loon works slowly and with great care. His studio is not a production space, but a place of research, repetition and reflection. Works emerge over a long period through a process of adding, removing and reinterpreting. Chance is given space, but is continually questioned and corrected.
His sculptures are not narrative, but existential. They invite silence and prolonged observation. In a time of visual abundance, Van Loon consciously chooses restraint, concentration and delay. The works function not only as objects, but as physical presence in the space—almost as quiet bodies, or quiet witnesses.
Development and recognition
Since the beginning of his professional practice, Thomas van Loon has been gaining increasing attention within the contemporary art context. His work is valued for its substantive consistency, material sensitivity and contemporary approach to sculptural form. Critics praise his ability, with minimal means, to evoke maximal physical and emotional intensity.
Thomas van Loon continues to deepen his practice around the human figure and the tension between body, technology and inner experience. His work forms a quiet but powerful countervoice within contemporary visual art—a invitation to attention, bodily awareness and delay.
