Randy Cano
A video posted by Randy Cano (@randy.cano) on Feb 8, 2016 at 7:42pm PST
A video posted by Randy Cano (@randy.cano) on Mar 22, 2016 at 10:34pm PDT
A video posted by Randy Cano (@randy.cano) on Feb 8, 2016 at 7:42pm PST
A video posted by Randy Cano (@randy.cano) on Mar 22, 2016 at 10:34pm PDT
Tran Nguyen (Instagram) is an award-winning illustrator and gallery artist. Born in Vietnam and raised in the States, she is fascinated with creating visuals that can be used as a psycho-therapeutic support vehicle, exploring the mind's landscape. Her paintings are created with a soft, delicate quality using coloured pencil and acrylic on paper.
"Designers Yitan Sun and Jianshi Wu have come up with an insane concept that imagines Central Park below ground and surrounded by glass walls. Dubbed “New York Horizon,” the project won first place in the eVolo Skyscraper Competition." says Highsnobiety
"The 1,000-foot-tall, 100-foot-deep structure would seemingly allow New Yorkers to have more space in the city, as the proposal includes digging deep into the earth and in turn filling the sunken landscape with hills, valleys and lakes. The reflective glass walls then provide the park with an illusion of infinity, giving the city a new horizon, thus being named “New York Horizon.”"
First and foremost WRDSMTH (Facebook) is a writer converted to street artist by a chance when he started glueing large sheets of paper with personal quotes on a streets of Los Angeles. As he loves travelling later he started tattooing walls in different cities including European capitals. His recent stop is The Covent Garden in London, the center of art and culture, that you may acknowledge through the pages of The Covent Gardener magazine.
Lucy Litman is a queen of Match the Pantone Colours with Everything she finds around her on daily routine and mainly it is food. As a perfectionist food photographer she managed to have a lot of fun of the process that she shares on Instagram
NYC art director Catherine Kim like to invent new colourful things by juxtaposing two different sides of our daily routines
P.s. You may find her works crossing the same topics of Paloma Ricon or Vanessa Mckeown, what make them more competitive and interesting
"The obscured overlays and expressive marks that embody Draxler’s work are relatable reflections of repressed subconscious. In constructing, deconstructing and reworking photographs and images, Draxler reveals struggles and surrenders, his work living and breathing with dark hints of existential sexuality. Abstracting and subtracting the human form, Draxler simultaneously masks and uncovers both form and emotion, body and feeling. His practice resonates with familiar deep-set feelings, and like many working artists, Draxler pulls from his own mental state. His ability to harness and reveal vulnerability, tension, anxiety and heaviness is unbounded as he confronts both what we repress and what we reveal." jessedraxler.com, Instagram, via The Creators Project
Michigan based artist Kelsey Beckett creates the world of fashionable fairies
Visual designer from Los Angeles, Blake Kathryn experimenting with digital art in her personal manner
Kim Joon pulls from the cultural influence of the United States—steeped in commercialism, superficiality, artifice and fantasy. He frequently appropriates brands in his work, distorting them onto the surfaces he builds in his digital prints. The result is a strange look into a world where commercialism has destroyed life as is, leaving a wake of surreal textures and patterns.
Maggie Sichter is a pattern and lettering artist based in Chicago. Her works are created with nothing but pen and paper, featuring the smallest of details and both floral and geometric influences - www.littlepatterns.com
Sean Mahan is a social realist figurative painter who works with graphite/acrylic on wood to depict a sense of wonder about innate human sweetness - seanmahanart.com
Awesome Californian artist working mainly in watercolours, meet Tracy Lewis (Instagram) and her fairy tales
For almost twenty years I’ve lived in the Sierra Foothills. My home has a tree house view of the world that has made nature an integral part of my life and my art. The metamorphosis of seasons and the cycles of life and death are reoccurring elements. A collection of curiosities, along with my love of fairy tales, Art Nouveau and Old Hollywood Glamour have also found their way into my art.
I paint primarily in transparent watercolor, layering luminous glazes of pure hue to give everything a candy coat of Easter-like color.
Architecture practice Grzywinski + Pons turned a house located on a typically gritty block on the Lower East Side of Manhattan into a contemporary apartment and studio building.
Read more on iGNANT
“By treating the top five floors conceptually as a vertical augmentation to the neighborhood’s historical typology, we elected to create a different skin for it.”
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA) commissioned Nervous System to create a new dress for the exhibition #techstyle, which runs from March 6 through July 10, 2016. The exhibition explores the synergy between fashion and technology and how it is not only changing the way designers design, but also the way people interact with their clothing. Inspired by petals, feathers, and scales, we developed a new textile language for Kinematics where the interconnected elements are articulated as imbricating shells.
Text by Nervous System
P.s. This is a chain reaction of generative fashion started (in our opinion) by Hussein Chalayan then went through Danit Peleg works
While preparing a new kick off collaboration for The Digital Decade 4 you won't miss, we are all eyes into a new and emerging artist working hard on a digital art scene. Check Kristina Kim (Instagram) and her "Techism" art. She believes that the future of art is digital, and she has initiated a movement called, “Techism”, which supports the digital artmaking processes, as digital technology facilitates experiential, co-creative, open participation and dialogue between the artist and the viewer on a constantly shifting basis through fluid interactivity
For his latest installation ‘Wall Excavation’, artist Daniel Arsham (previously) carved out large holes into faux-concrete walls at the SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, USA. Visitors can experience the artworks through the 300-foot long wall installation to engage with their surroundings in a new context. Additionally, the repetitions of carvings create a human-like silhouette, illustrating Arsham’s motivation to explore “mankind’s place in history” with the artwork.
“These select sculptural works and this installation explore the interaction between mankind and architecture, and draw particular attention to man’s capacity for creating, destroying and repurposing manmade and natural materials both historically and contemporaneously.”
All images © courtesy of Daniel Arsham
Using procedural generation Jon Noorlander (Method Studios, US) creates weightless digital sculptures for pure aesthetic purposes