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  • 
    Art

    #cardboard
    #installation
    #kinetic
    #sculpture
    #sound
    #video

    November 6, 2020
    Grace Ebert

    
    Swiss sound artist Zimoun (previously) harnesses the power of quick, chaotic movements in his large-scale installations and kinetic sculptures. Each artwork is composed of simple materials like cardboard boxes, wooden dowels, and cotton balls, among other common objects. Zimoun assembles multiples of the same configuration—think teetering sticks and metal washers suspended on a wire—and motorizes one portion, causing them to rattle back and forth.
    Because each component is made by hand, they have slight differences that prevent them from synchronizing, despite all the motors being connected to a single current. The frenzied movements contrast the calming, whirring sounds the artworks emit, which mimic raindrops or a repetitive drum. This juxtaposition is just one example of the many comparisons the artist draws: chaos vs. order, mass vs. individual, simplicity vs. complexity, and manufactured vs. organic.
    Considering this theme, Zimoun names each piece by listing the materials used to connect the discrete components and the whole. For example, a recent project that forms a square on the floor (shown below) is titled “1944 prepared dc-motors, mdf panels 72 x 72cm, metal discs Ø 8cm, 2020.” “In my work, I do not try to transport specific associations but rather to create atmospheric spaces and states that invite us to observe, think, and reflect on various levels,” he says.
    In the compilation video above, Zimoun showcases a variety of the sculptures and installations from his extensive body of work, many of which you can explore individually on Vimeo and follow on Instagram.

    “1944 prepared dc-motors, mdf panels 72 x 72cm, metal discs Ø 8cm, 2020.” All images © Zimoun, shared with permission
    “1944 prepared dc-motors, mdf panels 72 x 72cm, metal discs Ø 8cm, 2020”

    #cardboard
    #installation
    #kinetic
    #sculpture
    #sound
    #video

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  • 
    Art

    #flowers
    #ice
    #installation
    #plants
    #snow

    January 4, 2021
    Grace Ebert

    All images © Shiinoki/AMKK, shared with permission
    Japanese artist Azuma Makoto (previously) is known for shifting the contexts in which we typically view florals—think encasing bouquets in blocks of ice or suspending them in the stratosphere—through installations and designs that blur the boundaries between art and botany. Shown here is a 2018 project titled “Frozen Flowers” from Makoto’s In Bloom series. The undertaking brought the artist to Notsuke Peninsula in Hokkaido where he doused open blossoms and greenery in water. Positioned against the stark, snowy landscape, the resulting arrangement is frozen in its original splendor, allowing the vibrancy of the flowers to peek through the icicles.
    “The place where this installation was held in Hokkaido is also called the end of the world since blighted pine trees are usually spread out there and that place freezes over in winter,” says Makoto’s studio. “It was the series of how Azuma pursued unknown possibilities of flowers and how flowers express themselves under this condition.”
    More images and a short video of Makoto’s process are available on his site, and you can follow his latest works on Instagram. (via The Jealous Curator)

    #flowers
    #ice
    #installation
    #plants
    #snow

    Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!

     
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  • All images courtesy of Hirox, Tuur, and The Mauritshuis

    Explore an Incredible 108-Gigapixel Scan of Johannes Vermeer’s Most Famous Painting

    May 5, 2025

    ArtPhotographyScience

    Kate Mothes

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    One of the inimitable joys of visiting an art museum is being able to view paintings up close—to see their textures, frames, and the way the surface interacts with the light. But even if you had the opportunity to step past security wires and get within inches of an original canvas, you’d still never be able to see the work quite like the new, 108-gigapixel scan of Johannes Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring” (1665).

    The Mauritshuis has documented its most famous acquisition in unprecedented detail with the help of lens company Hirox, which has produced a video microscope capable of capturing the tiniest speck of paint with astonishing clarity. The outfit was also involved in an earlier reproduction of the same painting, creating an image composed of 10 billion pixels.

    This high-tech collaboration brings a 17th-century masterpiece to life with an interactive site inviting visitors to examine every micro detail. The new image is more than ten times as large as its predecessor—108 gigapixels translates to 108 billion pixels. A standard computer screen ranges from around four to six million pixels in its entirety. As Kottke notes, the resolution is very high, too, at 1.3 microns per pixel. (A millimeter is 1,000 microns.)

    Hirox, in tandem with a company called Tuur, produced a beautiful video and virtual tour. A three-dimensional tool for exploring the topography of the surface highlights Vermeer’s mastery of light, like reflections in the sitter’s eyes, the folds of her head scarf, and the minimal dabs of white paint on the titular pearl.

    This virtual exploration offers art historians and enthusiasts alike a chance to experience “Girl with a Peal Earring” like never before, regardless of where you are. But if you’re in The Hague, it’s also on view in the permanent collection of The Mauritshuis.

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  • 
    Art

    #anatomy
    #metal
    #roots
    #sculpture

    November 10, 2020
    Grace Ebert

    All images © Sun-Hyuk Kim, shared with permission
    Just like a tree, the spindly branches that shape Sun-Hyuk Kim’s sculptures extend from a larger, sturdy limb—or in the South Korean artist’s case, neck or spine, too. Kim (previously) creates sprawling artworks that merge human anatomy and the root systems that crawl underneath the earth’s surface. Sometimes painted in neutral tones and others plated in gold, the sculptures are composed of stainless steel that trails out into figurative forms.
    Imbued with metaphor, the intricate works consider our existence and their inherent incompleteness, Kim says. The “pandemic in 2020 clearly shows how weak the existence of a human being is,” he writes. “The human force encountered in this era, which has achieved many civilizations and cutting-edge science, reminds us of the collapse of the Tower of Babel, which was built to become like God.”
    To follow Kim’s latest projects that explore the connection between people and the natural world, head to Instagram.

    #anatomy
    #metal
    #roots
    #sculpture

    Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!

     
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  • 
    Art

    #landscapes
    #Los Angeles
    #oil painting
    #painting

    April 6, 2021
    Grace Ebert

    “Purple Mountain” (2020), oil on wood panel, 48 x 36 inches. All images © Seth Armstrong, shared with permission
    “Color and light are basically all I think about when I’m painting,” says Seth Armstrong. Working with oil paints on wood, the Los Angeles-based artist renders the sloping hills of his native California county in bold, saturated tones. Depicting the staggered houses and vegetation in the glow of golden hour or just after sunrise, Armstrong balances both hyperrealism and more sweeping, gestural strokes. He includes the occasional candy-colored hue to veil the densely populated landscape—the artist notes that small details can be difficult to perceive when not viewing the works in person—with a layer of magic. “The paintings do become, for me, more than a depiction of light and color,” he writes. “But that’s a personal relationship we have.”
    A limited-edition print of “Purple Mountain” releases on April 12 through Unit Drops, and Armstrong will have a solo show at Unit London this fall. Check out his Instagram for a larger collection of his paintings and glimpses into his home studio, where he works alongside ceramicist Madeleine Pellegren. (via This Isn’t Happiness)

    “5:30,” oil on wood panel, 12 x 12 inches
    “Green House” (2020), oil on wood panel, 14.5 x 14.5 inches
    “Pink Moment” (2020), oil on wood panel, 12 x 12 inches
    “November” (2020), oil on wood panel, 19.75 x 27.5 inches
    “September” (2020), oil on wood panel, 18 x 18 inches
    “March” (2020), oil on wood panel, 36 x 36 inches

    #landscapes
    #Los Angeles
    #oil painting
    #painting

    Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, help support our interview series, gain access to partner discounts, and much more. Join now!

     
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      More

Photography

  • How Carrie Mae Weems keeps making her presence felt

    Read More

  • Unmasked emotion – the photographer who saw beneath the surface

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  • The contemporary photographers who are completely obsessed with the passing of time

    Read More

  • The photographers who have got up close and very personal

    Read More

STREET ART

  • in Street Art

    David de la Mano’s ‘Sea Skin’ Connects Women, the Sea, and Time in Salerno

    11 November 2025, 07:37

  • in Street Art

    Roberto Carlos Treviño Rodriguez Explores the Fragility and Strength of the Mind with “Al Borde”

    14 October 2025, 11:53

  • in Street Art

    JOTALO Unveils a Poetic Tribute to Growth and Fragility in Villa del Río

    14 October 2025, 09:55

  • in Street Art

    Illuminating the Ordinary: David Speed’s Neon Goose Installation

    9 October 2025, 08:47

  • in Street Art

    Ettore and Andromaca Bring Ancient Myth to the Streets of Comacchio

    9 October 2025, 07:56

  • in Street Art

    Maurizio Cattelan and Avant Arte launch a global scavenger hunt with We Are the Revolution

    29 September 2025, 09:47

  • in Street Art

    MATRIZ — SpY orders the void with a suspended geometry in an old Hungarian power plant

    29 September 2025, 06:37

  • in Street Art

    British Courts Service Destroys Banksy Mural Depicting Attack by Judge

    10 September 2025, 15:40

  • in Street Art

    “S H A R E” by Giulio Vesprini in Italy

    18 June 2025, 12:10

ART

  • in Art

    Pastoral Landscapes Brim with Patterns in Luminous Paintings by David Brian Smith

    19 November 2025, 19:03

  • in Art

    Memory and Novelty Converge for Manuela Solano, Who Adopted a New Process After Losing Her Sight

    19 November 2025, 16:01

  • in Art

    Vibrant, Beaded Portraits by Felandus Thames Honor Memories and the Black Diaspora

    18 November 2025, 19:30

  • in Art

    Tomislav Topić Meticulously Layers Hundreds of Panels into Prismatic Mesh Installations

    18 November 2025, 14:54

  • in Art

    The Spanish Quarantine Island Residency Where Artists Disconnect—and Phones Are Banned

    17 November 2025, 20:11

  • in Art

    In ‘Dripping Earth,’ Cannupa Hanska Luger Ushers the Past into a Speculative Future

    17 November 2025, 17:00

  • in Art

    Domestic Life Dissolves into Blooming Gardens in Sarah Ann Weber’s Works

    17 November 2025, 14:21

  • in Art

    Layers Upon Layers Root in History in Li Songsong’s Impasto Paintings

    14 November 2025, 15:49

  • in Art

    Radiant Sculptures by Arghavan Khosravi Meditate on Subconscious Terrain

    14 November 2025, 13:45

Architecture

  • Historic zoo and pub recognised in 2025 WA Heritage Awards

  • Open for entries: Galang Residency 2026

  • Plans lodged for $340 million mixed-use precinct at former drive-in cinema

  • Winners announced: 2025 Architeam Awards

  • WA government declares 10 station precincts for fast-tracked housing

  • 2025 Victorian Honours

  • Australian studio reimagines asbestos as a renewed building material at Lisbon Architecture Triennale

Exhibition

  • The Metropolitan Museum Unveils 2026 Costume Institute Theme

  • A Myth-Busting Samurai Exhibition Is Landing at the British Museum

  • David Hockney’s Paintings Brought to Life in Dazzling Drone Show Over U.K. Skies

  • How Fiber Artist Gary Tyler’s Powerful Quilts Reframe a Life Stolen by Injustice

  • David Shrigley Is Selling a Pile of Old Rope for $1 Million

  • Forgotten Innovators of the Ancient World? A New Show Gives the Etruscans Their Due

  • Jenny Saville Is Getting a Landmark Exhibition in Venice

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