Artist Spends Months Arranging Children’s Building Blocks Into Incredible Architecture

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

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Many of us remember playing with some sort of building blocks growing up. While the plastic LEGO bricks might be the most well-known, Dutch brand KAPLA has been producing chunky wooden planks since the 1960s. Italian artist Raffaele Salvoldi began using this nostalgic childhood activity during the COVID-19 pandemic. This pastime quickly blossomed into an ongoing project titled Wood Arc, in which he constructs enormous towers entirely from KAPLA blocks.

From far away, these massive structures may seem like they are made from woven rattan or a similar process, but they are actually a result of Salvoldi's meticulous process. He takes his time adding each individual block to slowly create buildings that spiral, twist, and loom in historic spaces. So, it's no surprise that each of these sculptures requires at least three weeks of building time, which sometimes stretches to four months depending on the complexity of the design.

Wood Arc is not solely about the wooden structures but also about how these works interact with their environment. Salvoldi installs each one in a space that is full of history and culture. “Europe is rich in places of incredible beauty: palaces, exhibition spaces, and historical houses. Some are famous and often used, others are less known but occasionally come back to life through specific events,” he explains to My Modern Met. “Wood Arc project finds its home in these almost forgotten, enchanting spaces; it comes to life slowly, in two months or longer, through the creation of installation art that gradually rises in harmony with the rooms that host them.”

You can keep up to date with Salvoldi's latest projects by following him on Instagram.

Italian artist Raffaele Salvoldi creates enormous towers from KAPLA building blocks.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

Titled Wood Arc, each of these ornate structures is made from hundreds or even thousands of these wooden pieces.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

These incredible towers feature a myriad of details in the construction.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

Many of these sculptures reach the ceilings of wherever they are installed.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

Salvoldi installs each one in a space that is full of history and culture.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

“Europe is rich in places of incredible beauty: palaces, exhibition spaces, and historical houses. Some are famous and often used, others are less known but occasionally come back to life through specific events,” he explains to My Modern Met.

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

Wood Arc project finds its home in these almost forgotten, enchanting spaces; it comes to life slowly, in two months or longer, through the creation of installation art that gradually rises in harmony with the rooms that host them.”

Wood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele SalvoldiWood Arc Sculpture by Raffaele Salvoldi

Raffaele Salvoldi: Website | Instagram

My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by Raffaele Salvoldi.

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Margherita Cole

Margherita Cole is a Contributing Writer at My Modern Met and illustrator based in Southern California. She holds a BA in Art History with a minor in Studio Art from Wofford College, and an MA in Illustration: Authorial Practice from Falmouth University in the UK. She wrote and illustrated an instructional art book about how to draw cartoons titled 'Cartooning Made Easy: Circle, Triangle, Square' that was published by Walter Foster in 2022.
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