WATCH: This Car turns into a Transformer in Real-Life and NOT a Movie
Exploring, as he puts it, the "increasingly murky ground between reality and fantasy, fixed identity and transformation," artist Hetain Patel has taken a 1988 Ford Fiesta and morphed it into a towering Transformer.
Collaborating with his dad, who converts cars into hearses for a living, Patel spent six months working on this ambitious project. His first sculpture, the work was inspired by Patel's dad and his immigrant, working-class background.
"My first car was a 1988 Ford Fiesta gifted to me by my father as I turned 17. Born in the U.K. to immigrant Indian parents, the passing of a car between generations provided me with my first taste of independence," the artist said, according to the TED Blog. "In this new work, I’ve reworked a newly acquired 1988 Ford Fiesta, of the same specifications as my original car, to create my first sculpture. Manufactured in England, this car stands as a symbol of working-class Britain -- a native body, albeit a metal one."
(Watch a time lapse of the sculpture's creation in the video above.)
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He says, however, that his Transformer is different from the ones we're familiar with.
"Unlike the popular toys and films, the car here is not a high-powered sports car or truck transformed into a powerful warrior, but rather a small, inexpensive Ford Fiesta transformed into a human, calmly squatting," he said of the sculpture, which is on display at the Galleria Continua in France until December.
"This posture is a recurring image in my work and forges a link between the lower classes in India and my immigrant family in the U.K., both of whom sit comfortably this way," Patel continued. "Naturally this introduces a tension in this sculpture between the seemingly submissive nature of the squat and, in this case, its oddly larger-than-life scale."
Patel and his dad stand in front of the completed Transformer.