Lattanzio Art

Lattanzio Art What would you follow if there were no lines on your road? Creating lines to follow- enjoy Peace

original 3-d line sculptures in wood, metal, concrete, poured resin...
Creator of this unique low relief medium
light installations using color kinetic led lights and Lattanzio's 3 d line sculptures
original editioned art furniture in wood, metal, glass, acrylic
Check out our website at www.chrislattanzio.com
call 214 924-2232 direct - Chris Lattanzio

03/25/2026

Everyone else is head down.
Moving. Consuming. Following.

But you… you felt it.
That moment where something pulls you out of the herd—
where you stop, look up, and actually see.

That’s where this begins.

This sketch for a wood sculpture is about that shift—
from instinct to awareness, from noise to presence.
Not everyone notices it.
But if you’re here, you probably do.

The question is… what do you do with it? 🐄⚡️🌍

🕰️✨Always good to see an old friend.This carved wood piece from 2001 was hanging at the O’Briens’ house during the Junio...
02/02/2026

🕰️✨

Always good to see an old friend.
This carved wood piece from 2001 was hanging at the O’Briens’ house during the Junior Symphony Ball—six feet tall, acrylic on carved wood, and very much a throwback to when I was painting these by hand.
Big, bold, and a reminder that paths circle back.
Might return to this language someday. You never know.

🎨 ✨ 🌿 🍋 🤍New work. New year. A return to color.In 2003, the drumbeat of war pushed me into restraint—white surfaces, mon...
01/10/2026

🎨 ✨ 🌿 🍋 🤍
New work. New year. A return to color.

In 2003, the drumbeat of war pushed me into restraint—white surfaces, monochrome, letting line do the talking. It was a way to quiet the noise and sharpen meaning.

These times feel different. Still tense, yes—but aching for warmth, generosity, and presence. So I’m moving back into color.

What you’re seeing:

Left:
A black-line drawing—clean, structural, honest. A still life built from essentials: olives and lemons, olive branches, daisies, a shared table. It’s the bones of the piece. Line first. Always.

Right:
The same composition opened up in color. Warm wood tones, sun-heavy yellows, greens that breathe. Color isn’t decoration here—it’s nourishment. It’s the emotional payload.

Details:
Carved wood
48 × 72 × 2 inches

This piece feels like a beginning.
A good one.





12/29/2025

From sketch to shoreline.
Conceived and carved in Dallas, pulled into fiberglass resin from the original wood, then shipped west and installed at the Berkeley Aquatic Center—a 15-foot-wide, 10-foot-tall, 4-inch-deep monolith commissioned by Wareham Development.
This reel starts at the finish, then runs the clock backward: drawing, carving, molding, casting, building, hauling.
Process made permanent.




Learning how color behaves, not how it’s named.From page to perception to measured light.I stretch the hardware so it ca...
12/19/2025

Learning how color behaves, not how it’s named.
From page to perception to measured light.
I stretch the hardware so it can recalibrate the software.





ArtAndScience

12/18/2025

Learning how color behaves, not how it’s named.
From page to perception to measured light.
I stretch the hardware so it can recalibrate the software.















12/17/2025

Lotus Room — my first immersive artwork.
A 20 × 20 × 10 ft environment built from three universes of programmable LED light, sculptural form, and original music.
An early experiment in presence, perception, and inner stillness—where light becomes architecture and time slows.

Installed at McKinney Avenue Contemporary, Dallas, and Building 98 during the Chinati Open House, Marfa.

This was the beginning.

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12/15/2025

Another constellation of light-infused wood sculptures: St. Louis Cathedral (New Orleans), Sunflowers, Taos Chair, Medicine Man, and Bird of Peace.
Hand-carved, painted, and illuminated with static LED light—meant to be lived with, not rushed.
All works are held in private collections except Taos Chair, now on view at the Museum of Biblical Art, installed beside Mood Elevator.

Address

256 Regal Row
Dallas, TX
75247

Opening Hours

Monday 11am - 6:30pm
Tuesday 11am - 5pm
Wednesday 11am - 5pm
Thursday 11am - 5pm
Friday 11am - 6:30pm

Telephone

(214) 924-2232

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