150, 2005 PU-Schaum, Acrylfarbe www.angelikaarendt.de
Based in Beijing, artist Li Hui uses modern technology, lights, lasers, and LED lights to create fantastic, illuminated displays. In Reincarnation, the
interactive light features - Interactive light installations have become an extremely pervasive phenomenon in contemporary design. Light is a profound element in our lives. Thr...
Sound Poem (Kurt Schwitters) installation by Pavel Buchler. Denver 2013.
Sebastien Preschoux is a brilliant, one-of-a-kind artist from France who uses an integration of acrylic paint and string in his work. His collection, called [Hu] Man vs. Machine, reveals his talent as a unique artist, where he uses vibrant colours and lines that just seem to jump right off the page at you. Check out the gallery to see the amazing collection of this French artist.
ernesto neto is a brazilian contemporary visual artist known for creating installations and sculptures out of stocking-like material and nets that he fills with various objects like spices, sand and shells. drawing from biomorphism, minimalist sculpture, neo-concretism and other brazilian vanguard movements of the 1960s & 70s, the artist both references and incorporates organic shapes and materials that engage all five senses, producing a new type of perception that renegotiates boundaries between artwork and viewer.
In this collection of colorful art, we explore the artists behind some of contemporary art's coolest rainbow art installations.
One of the great things about Brussels is the culture and art which I find thriwing in the city. You walk a certain street and suddenly there is a new artwork there that wasn´t there last time you were there. I was walking towards downtown the other day when I saw this new artwork. What an original idea (or should I say orange idea;)).... For those who don´t know, this is an artwork of Arne Quinze, called "The Sequence, you can read all about it here: www.thesequence.be/SEQUENCE_BLOG/index.html And you can read all about the artist here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arne_Quinze
Edvard Munch
Le photographe Steve Hughes a eu la chance de tomber par hasard sur une installation florale dans un parc de Boulogne-sur-Mer, en France. Il s’agit d&rsqu
Click to enlarge The Spanish art collective Penique Productions was formed in 2007 with the first inflatable project in the University of Barcelona. The group’s projects consist of color inflatable…
Frank Lloyd Wright, who likened his design for the Guggenheim Museum to a teacup and saucer or an upside-down ziggurat from ancient Middle-Eastern
Felice Varini - Arte pubblica a Carcassonne. La contaminazione tra medievale e contemporaneo: a Carcassonne l'installazione anamorfica dell'artista svizzero continua a far discutere.
Artist Ann Veronica Janssens constructs sensorial sculptures of polycarbonate walls covered by transparent films which are filled with dense mist. Visitors to her “spatio-temporal experiences” fin…
Who is the best artist of all? This could be a question that could be the hardest as well as the easiest to answer. Tough because no artist likes to admit that some other artist is better than him or her and easy because the answer is obvious – Mother Nature is the best artist of all! We all know that artists from the beginnings of time have always taken their inspiration from nature and this has always led to some magnificent works of art. In fact taking Mother Nature is a great way to use when you think of how to involve teenagers in art projects – this will make them involved in art as well as nature. It is probably this combination that gave birth to the concept of ephemeral art.
My parents were in town the other week, so on a particularly beautiful September Sunday, my mum and I headed to Hyde Park to visit this year’s Serpentine Pavilion. The yearly structure is an event in the architecture world, as well as in the London cultural scene. (I previously wrote about London’s 2013 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion and, I must say, it’s still my favorite one.
As the rowan berries are still available I feel I need to carry on using them in my land art. When I made the berry ball and used this tree to display it, I noticed the wound on the tree, which must have happened long ago, I liked the shape and used the rowan berries to accentuate it. The tree is a scarlet oak, so using red berries seemed the right thing to use. It is very very windy here today, and I think I have mentioned before I do not like strong windy conditions, I don't know why it just makes me feel very uneasy. I sat under the tree being covered by little branches and leaves, I hurried not wanting a big branch to come down and whack me on the head! It is very sunny and warm though so Im not complaining too much!
Pretty Jellyfish Art Installation At The National Aquarium, In Baltimore, Maryland.
Michel Craig- Martin Michael Craig tends to focus mainly in objects. This works can be based on the theme “Place”, as the objects that we see on the piece of work, can be a representation of the pl…
Built in 1931, this Art Deco railroad underpass in Birmingham, Alabama is a vital gateway between the heart of downtown and a new urban space called Railroad Park. In recent years the dark tunnel had deteriorated into an unwelcoming and potentially dangerous area, so the city hired sculptor and public artist Bill FitzGibbons to create a lighting solution that would encourage more pedestrian traffic. Titled LightRails the installation is composed of a network of computerized LEDs that that form various lighting patterns in the previously darkened underpass. More
Artist Dasha Plesen combines molds, bacteria, spores, and other objects in petri dishes to create these colorful abstract
Niki de Saint Phalle ist eine französische Bildhauerin und Malerin, die in Deutschland unter anderem durch ihre Nanas bekannt geworden ist. Gelebt hat sie
Sebastien Preschoux - Color Theory, 2009
1,000 recycled doors are enough for the South Korean architect Choi Jeong-Hwa to transform a dull ten-story building into a fresh-looking landmark. This
Cristopher Cichocki, Land Spore (Desert Reserve), (2011).
Before you even enter the new Olafur Eliasson exhibition at London’s Tate Modern, the Danish-Icelandic artist starts messing with your mind.