Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Amdam Bainbridge’s work uses model-making as a departure point for the production of detailed pencil drawings. Through drawing he is able to explore aspects of working and middle class suburbia along with the possibilities of representation in art.
Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Video for Etienne de Crecy’s No Brain, directed by Fleur & Manu.
Posted by Fabio 20 May 2011
Artist Christian Hidaka is known for a distinctive visual vocabulary made of broad brush-strokes saturated by Technicolor palettes, recalling psychedelic design culture over the past forty years. His landscape paintings depict archaic and futuristic landscapes that combine styles and narratives whose conventions are partly inherited from Japanese prints. read more
Posted by Fabio 19 May 2011
Before receiving her MFA from Yale in 2003, Angela Strassheim became certified as a forensic photographer. She did crime scene, evidence, and surveillance photography in Miami and, while working in New York, photographed autopsies.
Posted by Fabio 19 May 2011
Nikos Moschos was Born in 1979 in Herakleio, Crete. He was first taught to draw by his father, Takis Moschos. He studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts from 1997 to 2003. Painting under the guidance of H. Botsoglou and Photography under M. Baboussis. His work has been acquired by the Benaki Museum, the Frissiras Museum, the Viannou Library and various private collections. read more
Posted by Fabio 18 May 2011
Shawn Smith’s work investigates the slippery intersection between the digital world and reality. Specifically, he is interested in how we experience nature through technology. “When we see images of nature on TV or on a computer screen, we feel that we are seeing nature but we are really only seeing patterns of pixilated light. read more
Posted by Fabio 17 May 2011
In a world awash with conceptual art and abstraction, Michael De Brito’s paintings stand out as a modern take on the bravura of figurative masters of the Twentieth and Twenty-first centuries. He esteems tradition as a guiding force that gives life and meaning to contemporary work.
Posted by Fabio 17 May 2011
Mariel Clayton, 1980, South Africa, is a self-taught photographer who works and lives in Canada. She discovered the world of miniature items in a Tokyo toy shop. Since then she has been photographing dolls to tell her stories. Through the internet she buys and collects the miniature items she needs for her photography shoots. read more