As our world becomes more and more virtual, the demand to bring things back to physical form increases. This is an exciting revelation for professional model makers. Who doesn’t use Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop in the design world? Yet, how often do we stop and appreciate the work as works of art? The Adobe Museum very cleverly and appropriately creates a virtual art gallery to showcase and celebrate the work created with Adobe products with a simulated physical experience. Our Model Art piece, the Adobe Museum Sculpture, brought the concept all the way out into physical form and is displayed as Model Art at Adobe headquarters. Because this building was never intended to exist in physical form, there were several heart-pounding milestones in the production of this piece. Note the towers, not growing straight up from the base, but cantilevering from the side. Note the intertwining twists and turns in the podium gallery spaces and the hundreds of pedals to be modeled. The challenge was not just reconstructing the idea into a usable 3D CAD format, but designing the piece so that it could be physically assembled and finished without falling apart, (as the laws of physics must now be considered) – with lighting, too. There were a few skeptics who doubted it could be done successfully, but we persisted through each technical barrier and the end product speaks for itself.