ART

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art

00:19

Lane Walkup

Lane Walkup is a sculptural artist based in Brooklyn, NY who uses steel and paint.

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00:44

Avant Gardey

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art

00:19

Miwa Ito Glasses

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art

01:31

Tadao Andō / "a short film of light & shadow"

This is a personal 3d animation based on works by the architect Tadao Andō. The idea is to explore the behavior of light and shadow in some of his minimalist projects. Music: Grass (Silent Partner)

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art

00:31

Precure Happy Shower Shining (Cure Happy Attack)

06

art

05:43

Onishi Yasuaki - vertical emptiness

Onishi Yasuaki uses tree branches, hot glue, and urea for his installation. He uses the glue to connect our ground to an imaginary world. Crystalized urea appears on thin glue lines and in the tree branches. This installation is presently exhibited at the Kyoto Art Center. Music by Suzuki Ryosuke,Kurachi Martha / kurachino Produced by Murayama Kanako

07

art

04:15

Fujiko Nakaya: Veil. Fog Installation at The Glass House

Fujiko Nakaya: Veil is a site-specific installation that enters into dialog with the Glass House, the iconic building that was designed American architect Philip Johnson and completed in 1949. The Japanese artist Fujiko Nakaya is known for her fog sculptures and environments. With Veil, she wraps the Glass House in a veil of dense mist that comes and goes, hiding the Glass House, and making it visible again. Inside the house, the fog seems to turn the huge glass plates of the structure into white walls, producing an opaque atmosphere in the otherwise extremely transparent building. Visitors can make this experience for approximately 10 to 15 minutes each hour, until November 30, 2014. Fujiko Nakaya: Veil coincides with the 65th anniversary of the Glass House and its 2014 tour season. It's the first site-specific artist project to engage the iconic Glass House itself. For the installation, Fujiko Nakaya uses water that is pumped at high pressure through 600 nozzles installed on three sides of the Glass House. The fog that is created by this installation makes the wind and the air streams visible, which surround the Glass House. As Nakaya explains: "Fog responds constantly to its own surroundings, revealing and concealing the features of the environment. Fog makes visible things become invisible and invisible things — like wind — become visible."

08

art

06:54

Issy Wood Featured at Carlos/Ishikawa Gallery in London

09

art

04:14

Filip Custic en BIBLI

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art

04:48

MEMORIES OF WHAT BECAME A DESERT

Shot in Dakar, Senegal MEMORIES OF WHAT BECAME A DESERT depicts two people who are scared to face their unbridgeable emotional distance. Through dance, language and space it explores the growing separation between its protagonists. Starring: Shelly Ohene-Nyako, Babacar Mané Music composition: Ilias Kampanis Voice recording: Samia Sayah

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art

05:17

COR

PICTURAL IDENTITY : Enfant Précoce MAKE-UP: Maud Eigenheer DANCERS : Mes Lesne - Eva Ndiaye - Patric Kuo - Katharina Diedrich - Mattéo Masson - Aliashka Hilsum - Tom Migné

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art

02:21

SIGNS

‘SIGNS’ is a mesmeric trip through prohibitions, warnings, and symbols made from thousands of international road signs.

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art

JAVIER MARTIN APPROPRIATION OF FRAGMENTS INSTALLATION ALMA AT ASCASO GALLERY MIAMI

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"Fragments" Part extracted or preserved, broken or detached , in this case decontextualized and modified for the adoption of new concepts. A language that Javier Martin has been researching and developing for more than a decade, an extension of his "blindness" concept where he explores through the appropriation of advertising images and icons, apparently perfect symbols of a standard of beauty in contemporary society, deconstructing these images to create a contrast between consumption and technology. In appropriation of fragments, Martin uses the space to create a dialogue between the individual fragments and their collective composition that forms the whole, transforming the gallery into a theater filled with fragments, representing the information overload of our time. A society created of fragments of information driven by advertising, technology and social media, questioning the veracity of what we recognize, through the use of appropriation, cutting, alteration and reflection, accentuating their emptiness; including the viewer in the scene and transforming them into a part of the fragments that invite self-reflection. This exhibition is composed of three different body of works, where we can find a journey that shows the interdisciplinarity of the artist. From the installation Alma, part of the permanent collection of the Seoul Museum, which consists of a cube covered with mirrors where the viewer is reflected through the appropriated images stamped on them and illuminated by neon, a material appropriated by Martin who considered it a form of public writing, unassociated with art, and traditionally associated with popular culture. He invites the viewer to step into a room where he has conceptually removed the walls, replacing them with unlimited light and space. Eliminating the barriers society imposes, which fill our minds with banal and insignificant thoughts, keeping us trapped and unable to realize the potential that exists beyond. In contraposition to the installation, the body of work “CUT” first presented by the artist in Shanghai in 2015, a thought-provoking series that challenges our preconceptions about the power of celebrity and the way we consume media. Creating iconic hand-cut photographs, technique inspired by The Chinese tradition of paper cutting, giving importance to the use of the negative space and the contraposition between wholeness and emptiness.

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