More than 25,000 colorful paper flowers adorn the 6-meter-high atrium of a shopping mall in Omotesando, Tokyo. The visually stunning scene is part of the latest installation by French-born Emmanuelle Moureaux, who created this vibrant work as part of the Setting the Future in Motion exhibition.
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Vases come in very different shapes, but ceramicist Greg Payce's vases are something special from this point of view. Take a closer look and you'll know what we're talking about. Hint, read between the lines or in this case, between the vases.
Usually, we don't need much convincing when it comes to chocolate. Unless you follow a strict diet, few people can resist it. Even the biggest chocoholics can have trouble with these incredibly realistic Sarah Hardy chocolate products. The British woman disguises chocolate as a human heart, insects, fossils, frogs, etc. and so realistic that they fool anyone.
Liu Bolin is a Chinese artist who masters the body painting technique. He knows how to paint himself so well that he literally blends in with his surroundings. He usually creates by finding a suitable background, choosing colors and starting painting himself. He has already stood in front of the Chinese flag, in front of the train, in front of various buildings, in front of trees, and sometimes he also sits down or lies down on the ground. In his last project, however, he painted other bodies and created replicas of two recognizable art paintings from the painted bodies.
Some say that anyone can be an artist. Perhaps true, but certainly not every talented artist. And the proof is these incredibly talented artists, whose artwork you will have to look at more than once.
Ever since Donald Trump was elected as the 45th president of the United States, we have been listening to the reactions of politicians, businessmen, celebrities and other individuals whose words count for something. Since you probably already have the statement at the top of your head, we preferred to look at how artists reacted to the election of the Slovenian son-in-law to the position of American president.
Street Art 2.0 is an art project by Philippe Echaroux, in which this Frenchman uses light instead of sprays and, in contrast to graffiti, otherwise the most typical representatives of street art, his works harmlessly intervene in the space. For his last canvas, he chose a tropical rainforest, where by projecting portraits of the Surui tribe onto the treetops, he drew attention to the problem and consequences of excessive deforestation.
Photographer Paul Maria Schneggenburger has always been fascinated by sleep, the state when the body is inactive and resting, when the senses and the mind are withdrawn so much that the mind does not receive anything. At that time, the Dutchman turns on his camera and, with the help of a long exposure time, photographs people while they sleep, creating the feeling that they are leaving a trace with their unconscious movement. they dance in their sleep.
Do you consider yourself an art connoisseur? Then Chinese pop star Jane Zhang's Dust My Shoulders Off music video is perfect for you to test your art skills. In it, many famous art paintings come to life. Do you recognize them all?
Do you have too much money? Don't know where to go with it? But maybe it can keep you warm like Pablo Escobar's family once did. The unusual coffee table is the work of Barcelona-based Amarist Studio and Alejandro Monge and is the latest contribution to their Too Much? series of artworks that expose the vulnerabilities of money and its true value. The glass table, which holds a burning pyramid of 50-euro bills behind the case, creates the illusion that the money is actually burning with the help of a flame on top.
Just over a year ago, French designer Julien Nonnon projected digital graffiti in the form of wild animals in a hipster guise onto Parisian buildings. This time, he projected couples kissing in the French style onto the facades of the French capital.
The unusual exhibition Hidden - Revealed (from October 6 to 31, 2016) is currently on view at the Creative Gallery, which reveals what is usually hidden from view. On it, the artist and photographer Bojan Sobočan, who has been creating casts of children's legs and arms and pregnant bellies for years, exhibits casts of the most intimate part of the female body - the vagina.