Sunday, March 13, 2011

Dark Brown With Purple Highlights

MOBILE CHISELLING

furniture designer Mattia Bonetti is fantastic in the truest sense of the word fantasy as fantasy, imagination, unusual, what is unrealistic. His works, balanced between dream and reality, born from the pencil on paper. With rapid and direct technique works in two dimensions by combining awe and maniacal precision, creating designs that have their own artistic value. Use the computer only to finalize the project. His ability to move from the laboratory design is amazing as his ability to make the objects of his imagination and physically in space. Bonetti use all materials, from metal to the many different kinds of wood wood, from plastics resins, in an apt combination of craftsmanship and technology, created with the same care as a jewel in the chisel.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

When Teething Stops For Rottweilers

A MERGER BETWEEN ART AND SCIENCE

Susan Derges images reveals the hidden forces of nature. His interest in the movement of running water does not translate into a mere recording of the phenomenon, but in capturing the poetic metaphors to describe this process provides the connections between ourselves and the natural world. To this end Derges implement a fusion of art and science using time and light to create images suspended. To carry out its work using large sheets of photo paper submerged in the rivers, the landscape at night as dark room, the moon and the torch to get exposure. The technique of photography without a camera is born from a frustration by posting: "The camera always separates the object from the viewer" and promising to speak of the invisible. Thus produces acts of transformation intercepting the threshold between two worlds intertwined: the interior space, imaginative and contemplative and the outside, natural, dynamic and evocative.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

More Emotional Peri Menopause

VENOUS INSIDE, OUTSIDE Voluptuous

Susan Jamison's paintings are painted with tempera egg, in a precise and detailed style that shuns the shadow to light, the use of soft colors and charcoal create a sense of indefinite or infinite space. The Jamison draws inspiration from many sources: the Renaissance portraiture, botanical and scientific illustrations, the Persian miniatures and fashion design. In compositions, female bodies are covered with pink embroidery as to associate the extreme femininity of lace to the vitality of the circulatory system. The figures appear to be cut and the individual members are as isolated parts of the body around which animals and plants chosen for their symbolic associations as well as household equipment: scissors, needles, threads and lace, all of which contribute to stress extreme femininity from an interior and an exterior venous voluptuous.