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Terabyte | Mixed Media by Erik Jensen Art. Item composed of synthetic in minimalism or mid century modern style
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Created and Sold by Erik Jensen Art

Erik Jensen Art

Terabyte - Mixed Media

Price $6,930

In Stock Now

Shipping: 7-14 days
Price $200 Shipping in the US, ask the creator about international shipping.
Estimated Arrival: January 1, 2025

Reclaimed Materials

Recycled Materials

Upcycled Product

Made In USA

DimensionsWeight
52.5H x 52.5W x 3D in
133.35H x 133.35W x 7.62D cm
45.36 kg
100 lb

FRAMED ORIGINAL
White frame

Wired to hang

Signed on back

Completed 2020

approx. 47.5” by 47.5”

4225 keys = ~48 recycled keyboards

Scan it with your smartphone and you’ll find the following:

A TERABYTE is 1,099,511,627,776 bytes, 1,024 gigabytes, or 1,048,576 megabytes.
916,259,689 pages of plain text (1,200 characters).
4,581,298 books (200 pages or 240,000 characters).
349,525 digital pictures (with 3 MB average file size).
262,144 MP3 audio files (with 4 MB average file size).
The Computer Key Artist -_-?

Item Terabyte
Created by Erik Jensen Art
As seen in Creator's Studio, UT, UT
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Erik Jensen Art
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2020
Art is my first language, e-waste is my jam.

Erik Jensen, a Utah native, has always embraced art. Being born deaf, he considers art to be his first language. Erik studied art in college and taught high school art classes for a couple years, but then started computer key art as a business in 2017.

Erik lives true to his motto: “People will tell you that you are a crazy dreamer because they don’t believe in you. But crazy dreamers believe in themselves and prove they are not a crazy dreamer by making it happen. So be a crazy dreamer and make it happen.”

While attending Utah Valley University, an art professor challenged the class to take something people don’t want and turn it into something people do want. With keys from an old computer keyboard he had lying around, Erik made a face coming out of a computer screen. This intrigued him to do more with computer keys. After a couple years of experimenting different ways to use keys, he thought of doing pixel images. He started out using only the natural color keycaps, while he worked to develop a successful dyeing recipe over the next couple years.That was when it blossomed.

Erik started out recreating images, such as animals, to embrace the pixel concept that we are all too familiar with in this technological world. Since then, Erik has pivoted to recreating landscapes and other pixelation images and abstracts. Each key has its own personality expressed by shape, color, depth, etc. Placing these keys together gives a pixelated beauty from the front and a mesmerizing texture up close and on the side.

Since the start of using computer keys for art, Erik has participated in various conferences, shows and festivals. He’s won several awards throughout his art career. His studio is based in SLC, UT where he has a very supportive wife and three children.