Leo+DadMade for Leo
Distortion, Scale and Exaggeration
Rung 1 of 4 · Discover

When Size Becomes the Whole Point

Before you distort a single shape, let's see why blowing something up — or making it floppy — quietly changes what it means.

Postmodern frame Builds on: colour, surrealism

Play Drag the slider and watch the same ice-cream slide from cute to ordinary to monumental to absurd.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Here's the whole idea in one breath: change an object's size or shape and you change what it means, even if you change nothing else. A spoon the size of a building isn't a spoon any more — it's a monument, or a joke. A hard thing made soft and floppy stops being trustworthy and starts being unsettling. Scale and material do this work all on their own.

Start with Something You've Already Felt

Picture an ordinary ice-cream cone. In your hand it's nothing — cute, sweet, instantly forgotten. Now imagine it three storeys tall, leaning over a footpath in the middle of town. Same shape, same colours, same everything — but suddenly it's grand and ridiculous at once, and you can't not look at it. Nobody added meaning to the ice-cream. The size did that. Drag the slider in the toy and you'll feel the caption change under your hand: cute, ordinary, monumental, absurd — with the object sitting perfectly still the whole time.

This is a much newer way of thinking than the careful, rule-bound drawing of earlier centuries. It belongs to the postmodern world — artists who decided the everyday supermarket object was worth taking seriously, and that you could make people feel something just by getting the scale gloriously wrong. That's the soil this whole "Soft serve" unit grows out of.

Say it plainly: you don't always need a new subject to say something new. Take an ordinary thing and resize or reshape it, and the meaning shifts all by itself.

The Two Levers That Do All the Work

Scale is the loud one. Too small and a thing reads as a toy or a trinket; sat at the size your eye expects, it says nothing at all; pushed bigger than a person and it tips into the monumental; pushed bigger still and it becomes absurd, comic, almost dreamlike. The figure standing beside the object in the toy is doing real work — without something familiar for scale, your eye has nothing to be surprised by.

Material is the quiet one. We carry deep expectations about how things should feel — a chair is hard, a spanner is rigid, a toilet is cold porcelain. Make a hard object soft and droopy and the brain trips over itself: the thing looks wrong in a way it can't quite name. That uneasy feeling is the artist's tool. It's exactly the trick at the heart of soft sculpture, which you'll meet properly in the last rung.

Resize it and it becomes monumental or absurd. Soften it and it becomes uncanny. The object never changed — only your expectations got broken.

So in the toy, slide the ice-cream from tiny to giant and read the caption each time. Nothing about the thing moved — only its scale beside a human being. That single change is enough to carry a whole idea, and that's the secret this concept is built on.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

Why does a giant spoon feel grand and funny at the same time — how can it be both?

What ordinary object around our place would feel the strangest if it went soft and floppy?