Posted by Fabio 10 October 2013
Hideaki Kawashima is known for the ethereal beauty of his bright compositions. The artist almost exclusively draws female portraits or heads in very light colors and in always the same rounded shape.The almond eyes are characteristic of the artist’s special and unmistakable style. read more
Posted by Fabio 10 October 2013
Amy Bennett works with common themes such as transition, aging, isolation, and loss, she is interested in the fragility of relationships and people’s awkwardness in trying to coexist and relate to one another. To that end she creates miniature 3D models to serve as evolving still lifes from which she paint detailed narrative paintings. read more
Posted by Fabio 10 October 2013
Petros Chrisostomou photographs small-scale, ordinary, ephemeral objects in architectural models that he constructs himself, and then dramatically arranges, often employing lighting and staging conventions of the theatre. read more
Posted by Fabio 10 October 2013
The Visitors is a large installation consisting of nine video projections on a scale of 1:1. It brings into play the relationships between live concerts, the tradition of performance, poetry, and immersive cinema, based on the repetition and circular nature of actions and settings. read more
Posted by Fabio 9 October 2013
Ray Yoshida’s Museum Of Extraordinary Values presents, for the very first time, the entirety of his finds. The contents of his Chicago apartment at 1944 Wood Street have been sectioned into nine tableaux that are based on site visits, interviews, and photographs made during his life as well as after his death. read more
Posted by Fabio 9 October 2013
We are pleased to announce that Aurillac-France has been added to the map of Citylikeyou with a selection of must-see places recommended by Aurillac-based artist, Cendrine Rovini. See more here.
Posted by Fabio 9 October 2013
The making of a new public artwork by British artist and designer Alex Chinneck in Cliftonville, Margate. Filmed and edited by Hazeleigh Prebble. read more
Posted by Fabio 9 October 2013
Onishi Yasuaki uses tree branches, hot glue, and urea for his installation. He uses the glue to connect our ground to an imaginary world. Crystalized urea appears on thin glue lines and in the tree branches.