Mars Rocket Coin Bank
Mars Rocket Coin Bank

Mars Rocket Coin Bank

Metal Sculpture (ID: A141783)
Designed by Scott Nelles
$200
$200 $200 /
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The planet Mars has always fascinated us earthlings and many dream of going there. Although the artist doesn't want to go anywhere in a real rocket, he can still have fun with the idea by making his sand cast aluminum "Mars Rocket Coin Bank." Maybe if you save up enough coins in this bank it could be your down payment on your own rocket ride.

Like all the artist's banks it is held together with one screw. When you remove the screw, the bank opens and your cash tumbles out. All of the artist's work is made by hand in his studio foundry by himself and his helpers.

The bank is cast aluminum with a small bronze finial on top. It weighs 2lbs. 3oz.
  • Signed by the artist
  • Materials: Aluminum, Bronze
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.
Scott Nelles

Scott Nelles

"My life revolves around my art in three dimensions."

Scott Nelles (pronounced nell-ess) creates cast bronze sculpture using the trades of industry. Much of the inspiration for his work actually comes from the process in which he makes it. Cast metal toy cars, boats, and airplanes take him back to his childhood in Detroit, where his father, a manufacturer's representative, would take Scott on factory tours. The dramatic sight and heat of molten metal became a part of his soul, and the excitement of the foundry process has never left him.

Many people are aware of the lost-wax method of creating bronze castings and sculpture. Scott Nelles, on the other hand, creates his art by using the lesser-known sand-casting method. This process is seldom used in the arts, and very few are aware of its possibilities. Nelles takes advantage of this process to express his artistic visions and also to make his art more accessible to the public.

Faced with uncontrollable ambition, Nelles dropped out of art school and traveled across the country until he ended up in Seattle, WA, in 1972. Seattle was home to several small foundries. With the help of these foundries, he was able to gain a knowledge base that finally allowed him to open his own facility back in his home state of Michigan.

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