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in ArtA Playfully Grotesque Monster Peeks Out of Danaé Brissonnet’s Ravenous Mural in Montréal
Art#Danaé Brissonnet
#mural
#public art
#puppets
#street art
#videoAugust 11, 2022
Grace Ebert More
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in ArtResponsive Sculptures by Daniel Rozin Echo Human Movement Through Undulating Objects
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in Art‘Real Time’ Uses Amusing Manual Techniques To Track the Passage of Each Minute
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in ArtRitualistic ‘Moon Drawings’ by Yuge Zhou Etch Patterns in Snow and Sand
Art
#drawing
#landscapes
#performance
#sand
#snow
#videoFebruary 10, 2022Grace EbertJanuary 2021. All images © Yuge Zhou, shared with permission“In traditional Chinese culture, the moon is a carrier of human emotions,” writes artist Yuge Zhou. “The full moon symbolizes family reunion.” This belief grounds Zhou’s meditative series of landscape drawings that etch wide, circular patterns in the beach along Lake Michigan and in snowy parking lots near her apartment.The Chicago-based artist postponed a visit with her family in Beijing back in 2020 and has since channeled her longing to return into her ritualistic performances. Filming aerially at dawn, Zhou traces the patterns left by the moon with her suitcase and allows the glow of nearby light poles to illuminate the concentric markings. Stills from the videos appear more like dreamy renderings than footage, an aesthetic choice that corresponds with their allegorical roots in the Han dynasty legend, “The lake reflecting the divine moon,” about the universality of longing.Having created five works in summer and winter, Zhou likens the pieces to “mantras suspended in a time of waiting.” Until she’s able to return to China, she plans to add more drawings to her collection and continue “bringing the moon down to me on the earth.” For more of the artist’s multi-media works, visit her site and Vimeo.February 2022January 2020July 2020February 2022August 2021
#drawing
#landscapes
#performance
#sand
#snow
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in ArtSculptural Kinetic Lifeforms by Choe U-Ram Sway and Flutter in Hypnotic Motion
Art
#kinetic
#LED lights
#metal
#sculpture
#videoJanuary 20, 2022Grace Ebert[embedded content]With assistance from embedded CPU motors, Seoul-based artist Choe U-Ram (previously) mimics the lithe movements of animals and plants with his mesmerizing kinetic sculptures. The large-scale pieces are often suspended from the ceiling and illuminated by LED lights that cast glimmering reflections on the metallic components.Included in his most recent works is the frayed, Tyvek-coated sculpture titled “One,” which imitates the lifecycle of a flower as it opens to a bright, full bloom before retreating to a smaller, darker form associated with decay. “Orbis” and “Song of the Sun” conjure more animalistic motions that evoke long fins gliding through the water and flapping wings, respectively, although the latter’s petal-like elements produce shadows that fill the gallery space with silhouettes of thick foliage.Watch more of the artist’s sculptural creatures in action on his site and YouTube.
#kinetic
#LED lights
#metal
#sculpture
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