Nasus' Secret Garden
Moving illustration for [INVADE ART] exhibit created by Mr Misang, depicting a legend of “Nasus and Shurima”
Moving illustration for [INVADE ART] exhibit created by Mr Misang, depicting a legend of “Nasus and Shurima”
Last weekend MTArt Agency launched public art at AZIMUTH music festival, that took place in the very special historical site of Al Ula.
For this special occasion, exclusive sculptures were commissioned by Shuster+Moseley and Lauren Baker on the themes the Sun, mix of cultures and discovery.
Shuster + Moseley is a conceptual art studio led by Claudia Moseley (b. 1984) and Edward Shuster (b. 1986). The studio creates light-mobiles, sculptural installation and immersive, meditative environments reflecting on the nature of consciousness and technology.
Lauren Baker, born 1982, from Middlesbrough, UK. Currently lives and works in London. Lauren Baker is a British contemporary multidisciplinary artist who exhibits internationally. Her work explores the fragility of life, energy-fields, the after-life and other dimensions. Using neon light to express universal energies and life mantras, she aims to raise the vibration of love and connection within the world.
Photography by Roman Scott @romanscott
“Sebastian Weiss is a Hamburg-based architecture photographer with a flair for exquisite, impeccable angles. Having documented sites such as Spanish La Muralla Roja for Wallpaper* and Parisian suburbia, he is also the author of “Dramatic personae” series that aims to “represent public faces that deliberately restrains the identity of the object in order to concentrate on its public performance” via @trendland
Creative duo Leta Sobierajski and Wade Jeffree delivered their first international exhibition “Music To Your Eyes”. They bring our distinctly optimistic, unapologetically vibrant, and supremely fun world of explosive colour to Calm and Punk's gallery space in Tokyo.
Music to your eyes is an exploration of harmony through visual stimulation of our work in order to explore colour and form. Our goal is to ignite a sensation for the viewer that is optimistic yet also leaves them with a sense of joy. Ultimately it is our way we describe our work: as visual music. Similar in concept to audible music, everything we look at and engage with has its own rhythm. Through the use of multiple mediums ranging from photography, wall reliefs, inflatables and a virtual reality experience, we encourage visitors to enter their world of insatiable optimism and explosive color.
The photographs on these walls are real—they are not 3D. The bodysuits were designed specifically for this show, and the sculpted shields held by those bodies were cut and painted by hand. We embrace the fact that they are imperfect and flawed. In the photographs on the walls, we camouflage ourselves as body sculptures, drenched in pattern and color that transcends from these images to sculptural wall hangings to inflatables hanging from the ceiling and finally to virtual reality discoverable through a headset. Our goal is to extend their vision to multiple dimensions, so you may enjoy their colorful world no matter which reality you may live in.
“An old factory in Poblenou, Barcelona was converted into a creative centre for business innovation. Envisaged by ARQUITECTURA-G for a decade of development, led by the economy of means, the original layout of the space was preserved and features an office, classroom, workspace and bathrooms.”
A creative collaboration between Nikita and Maria Replyanski and Kirill Maksimchuk from the world of Cyber Warrior. In this art project, they research a nature of an artificial personality. Team has created 8 characters by mixing real shooting, 3D printing, computer graphics, fashion, and art to find the identity of a nowadays person. The collaboration was presented at the Digital Fashion Exhibition curated by @trashymuse at EP7 in Paris during the Fashion Week {23 September to 1st October 2019}
Art direction & Concept Design: @n.replyanski
Photo: @notyouramericandream
Style: @katrin_white
VFX: @nomorerender
Graphic Design & Typography: @electroseela
Filippa Edghill is a Swedish/Barbadian painter and illustrator living in Biarritz, France. We focus on her block prints series, depicting feminine in a simple one-colour manner with an Ancient Greek twist
Photographer Petecia Le Fawnhawk is known for creating striking surrealist landscapes using a mix of sculpture and editing techniques. Her new series “Shifting Perspectives” was recently commissioned by Apple and they looks like a “Monument Valley” recreated in real life
Spanish photographer Guillermo Espinosa based in Berlin shares his camera view on architecture, urban life and portraiture
Turkish artist Ceren Bulbun uses the traditional art of collage in a very innovative way: where she mixes natural phenomenon with human anatomy and body details.
Finding connections between nature and human body: a violet eyelid remembering a purple galaxy, the veins in our eyes that resemble a red striated marble or tangled fingers blended with wave power.
Lena Pogrebnaya was born in Odessa, Ukraine. She first fell for photography in 2009 while studying at Odessa State Academy of Civil Engineering and Architecture. After graduating in 2011 Lena continued her photographic exploration. Brutalist architecture of the 50s and 70s quickly became Pogrebnaya’s main inspiration. The essence of her projects lies in monumental constructions featuring concrete, granite, decorative tiles of multiple colors and… people merged with the aesthetics.
Her artistic investigation goes beyond conventional approach that nature and industrial objects should be opposed. For Lena Pogrebnaya architectural forms are part of the nature — being creations of people, nature’s products themselves. In her “nature creating nature” universe a human being feels harmony both in the wild and urban environment. Her models looks dignified in any site, and yet they are simply a unit of the beautiful surrounding just like everything else in the picture.
French art director and illustrator Jerome Masi shares his flat-styled artworks that looks like a paper-cut masterpieces
For their new office, Italian architecture studio AMAA converted an abandoned plumbing factory into this industrial, two story dream workplace in Arzignano, a town in the west of Italy’s Veneto region.
“From Rembrandt I’ve learned how little light there is in man. The Rembrandtesque portrait exhausts all its light resources; there is no more light in it. Light itself seems to be the interior refraction of a light that dies somewhere, far away. Rembrandt’s chiaroscuro doesn’t derive from bringing clarity and darkness in close proximity but from the illusion of light and from the infinity of the shadow. From Rembrandt I’ve learned that the world is born out of the shadow…”
French architect Thomas Paturet shares his photography series “Chiaroscuro” taken on Mount Saint Helens & Mount Rainier in Washington
The Invisible Realm is the creative agency of visual artist and creative director Felipe Posada. Working mostly with CGI, Animation and Digital Collage, his artworks are an amalgamation of multiple source materials, such as scanned vintage advertising, creative commons imagery, assorted textures, original photography and 3D
“Conceptual illustrator and artist living and working in Brooklyn, Dan Bejar likes to focus on conceptual image making naturally lends itself towards a variety of subject matter, but he is often tasked with lending his conceptual approach to create visual solutions for challenging subjects and to convey the social and political issues of our day.” via @trendland
Photographer Kris Provoost shares his shots of Taipei Performing Arts Center that is still under construction under OMA/Rem Koolhaas architect direction and looks like a giant golf ball hits a cube