装置艺术与陈设设计。
Darren Harvey-Regan explores the medium of photography and its ability to reinterpret the way we perceive our surroundings.
The Bluhm Family Terrace is transformed into an imagined Chinese landscape with the installation of five of Ugo Rondinone's towering interpretations of scholars' rocks.
About Black Palissandro marble and gold leaf, 49 cm × 30 cm × 16 cm. Unique piece. In his contemporary sculpture, Italian artist Mattia Bosco seeks to create a synthesis between concept and form. The two combine with balance and harmony, bringing his unique, abstract stone sculptures to life.
About Black Palissandro marble and gold leaf, 48.5 cm × 33 cm × 22 cm. Unique piece. In his contemporary sculpture, Italian artist Mattia Bosco seeks to create a synthesis between concept and form. The two combine with balance and harmony, bringing his unique, abstract stone sculptures to life.
A weekly Saturday recap to share with you our favorite links, discoveries, exhibitions, and more from the past seven days. This week: We're taking a break from NYCxDesign coverage to call trends like we see ‘em, honor a collab that raises flags to raise funds, and praise the “dark horse” of It earrings.
Still life photographer, specializes in beauty, cosmetics, luxury, accessories, jewelry, food, drinks, beverage, conceptual photography. New York City based
Han Jiang river stone Gongshi belongs to the Chinese tradition of venerating beautiful stones, which has existed since the Neolithic era, when prized geological specimens were placed into tombs as offerings. Chinese writers composed essays praising the natural qualities of these gazing stones, especially if they were represenative of mythological creatures like dragons, spiritual concepts, prominent mountains or had a captivating aesthetic. They are also known as Lingbi Stones and Scholar Rocks and have been a favorite with collectors since ancient times. Some were revered if they conjured imagery of immortals and sages or the remote mountain grottoes
Pascal Grandmaison is a conceptual artist exploring the relationship how one perceives art through the act of capturing an image.
Proportions of Stone is a minimalist collection of furniture pieces created by Seoul-based designer Sisan Lee
Immutable Ice 5 Yule marble 16” x 9” x 17” H $6,000 This series began on a beach in Iceland littered with pieces of glacial ice. The ice pieces appear regularly as a nearby glacier calves off chunks that float in the ocean, melting into extraordinary shapes until they are washed ashore and later washed away in the tide. Each day unique shapes are created as the ocean carves the ice, and each day these beautiful natural sculptures melt out of existence. Immutable Ice is my attempt to preserve the ephemeral beauty of these fleeting forms by carving them in marble, lasting and immutable. This effort is a gesture: an evocation of a moment; a desire to preserve that which cannot be saved. Jessica Drenk is an American artist raised in Montana, where she developed an appreciation for the natural world that remains an important inspiration to her artwork today. Tactile and textural, her sculptures highlight the chaos and beauty that can be found in simple materials. Drenk’s work is also influenced by systems of information and the impulse to develop an encyclopedic understanding of the world. Drenk’s work can be found internationally in private collections, as well as corporate and university collections within the US. Drenk has been the recipient of several awards, including an Artist Project Grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, and the International Sculpture Center’s Outstanding Student Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award. Her work has been pictured in Sculpture, Interior Design, and Curve magazines, as well as The Workshop Guide to Ceramics. Her work has recently become a part of the Fidelity art collection and the Yale University Art Gallery. Drenk has an MFA in 3D Art from the University of Arizona and a bachelor’s degree from Pomona College where she was an art major. A working artist since 2007, Drenk’s home and studio are currently in Florida.
Born in Tokyo, Dusseldorf-based artist Ramon Todo creates beautiful textural juxtapositions using layers of glass in unexpected places. Starting with various stones, volcanic rock, fragments of the Berlin wall, and even books, the artist inserts perfectly cut glass fragments that seem to slice through the object resulting in segments of translucence where you would least expect it. You can see more of his work over on Art Front Gallery, and here. More
Darren Harvey-Regan explores the medium of photography and its ability to reinterpret the way we perceive our surroundings.
Ceramic Taihu Stone "Scholar's Rock" by Meng Zhao (1967 - ) via { Haughton }
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The Bluhm Family Terrace is transformed into an imagined Chinese landscape with the installation of five of Ugo Rondinone's towering interpretations of scholars' rocks.