
Callum Morton is an Australian artist whose work engages architecture as a psychological and cultural artifact. His sculptures, installations, and public works often replicate building facades, interiors, and fragments at altered scale, revealing how constructed environments shape emotional life.
Morton frequently uses sound, light, and narrative suggestion to animate architectural shells. Windows may glow from within, voices echo behind walls, or structures appear damaged or incomplete. These theatrical cues transform static forms into scenes of implied human presence.
His work draws from modernist architecture, commercial signage, and pop-cultural ruins, treating buildings as repositories of memory and desire. By shifting scale—miniature skyscrapers, domestic interiors compressed into boxes—he creates uncanny encounters that feel both familiar and estranged.
Public commissions extend this logic into real landscapes, inserting fictional or distorted fragments into everyday circulation.
Callum Morton is an Australian artist known for sculptures and installations that reinterpret architecture through scale, narrative, and psychological atmosphere.
Callum Morton is an Australian artist whose sculptures and installations reinterpret architecture through altered scale, sound, and theatrical cues, revealing its psychological and cultural dimensions.