Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Singapore Art Festival 2010



Singapore Art Festival 2009; something to look forward to this coming May & June. Watch out for all the amazing free shows :D and all the spectacular opening and closing shows. :D

Click here for the complete information : http://www.singaporeartsfest.com/
And here and here to download the Festival Guides. :D

Have a great time everyone! I know I will :D

Paper Splatter Sculpture by Andreas Kocks

I can definitely saw this sculpture on the wall of some high end hotel/ restaurant. It will make a great artwork!

And while you browse all through these images, just keep in mind that these are made of paper.. :)

Enjoy!










via http://www.andreaskocks.com/ and http://illusion.scene360.com

Video of the Day : The Third & The Seventh

I don't really understand the correlation between the title of this short movie with the movie itself, but what I do know that this is one MAD piece of art!

Every scene is so pretty, and carefully proportioned.
And I should also warn you, bear in mind that none of what you about see is real footage! This isn’t VFX, it’s fully created with a mix of 3dsmax, Vray, After Effects, and Premiere.

And all by one person, Alex Roman *hand clapping sound fx* :D

It's just amazing. How reality can now LITERALLY being manufactured.
So who actually knows what's wrong and what's right? Or what's true and what's lies in this world?? *sigh*

Anyway...



Enjoy!! :D



The Third & The Seventh from Alex Roman on Vimeo.



via shapeandcolour

Light Calligraphy

This is super awesome!

I know that light graffiti is quite common now, but light calligraphy takes it on a higher level.


"Vivre libre" - Amphithéâtre de Fourvière - 2008
Calligraphy : Julien Breton - Kaalam
Photography : G.J. Plisson


"Poésie" - Pol'n - Nantes - 2007
calligraphy and photography : Julien Breton


"Kata" - Atelier de Brusk Lyon - 2008
Calligraphy : Julien Breton - Kaalam
Photography : G.J. Plisson


"Déraciné" - Lyon - 2007
Callligraphy : Julien Breton - Kaalam
Photography : G.J. Plisson

Check out the rest of these cool work here.

unico.world : real women of the world by Eliana Lorena




I think this is the real Barbie dolls that should be on sale in the world market. To let little girls aware and embrace our cultural differences instead of dwelling in the superficial consumerism.. :)

Unfortunately these darling dolls only sold in an auction by Sotheby's at Palazzo Vecchio, Florence in November to support the 'Save the Children' organization.


via Designboom

Banksy's Thoughts on Global Warming

So below is what Banksy's thoughts on global warming :


image via timesonline.



These other graffitis below I'm not sure if it has anything to do with global warming. But the most interesting part is to spot Banksy's work; even if it's as subtle as this Mr. Rat and the guy helping government to remove graffitis even from under the bridge's wall where nobody can see..









via artofthestate and their Flickr account.

The World Without Electricity

I just read this very enlightening post and videos about The Astrolabe and Antikythera Mechanism.


The Persian astrolabe image from Wikipedia

It's so amazing and beautiful. It looks like something that comes from a parallel universe totally different from our world today. But it's not. The technology was first discovered around 200 BC; spreading from the Greek to the Arabs and then to the rest of the world. It became popular in Europe on the 13th century.

It reminds me a lot of Lyra Belacqua's Alethiometer (from the Golden Compass, the first novel in Philip Pullman's trilogy His Dark Materials).

So what does this device do?

Basically it tells time. And it features a calendar; it can show you the prayer times (for Muslim); directions for Qibla; and more than 1000 functions in relations to astronomy, astrology, horoscopes, navigation, surveying, etc.

And it runs on mechanical measures only. No battery or electricity whatsoever needed.
It's like the greenest super-computer ever! :D How cool is that?!

It made me see things from a totally different point of view. That technology doesn't equals with electricity/ electronics. It means we (the human race) can be superbly advanced in technology, and doesn't necessarily need a single watt of electricity!

And the most beautiful thing is that, to use this device, you have to connect yourself with Nature. The Universe. Because to tell the time using Astrolabe, first you will need know the name and positions of the stars in the sky; as it will correlate with the constellations that already marked in your Astrolabe's plate. It means that you have to take your time, slowing down, look up to the sky, appreciate Nature's beauty, and then it means that you'll need to have a clear & unpolluted sky.

It's a device with highly advanced technology that let us work with Nature instead of protecting ourselves from Nature (the case with some recent "advanced" technologies); which most of the time leave us totally forgetting what and where we're coming from; and merrily destroying the Nature we're supposed to protect along the way. And with that, destroying our own future.

See the enlightening talk below :) :


And other mechanical technological wonders :

The Automaton

via The Franklin Insitute

via This Recording

The Antikythera Mechanism

via gotoknow.org and Wikipedia

AQUALTA; sign of an acceptance?

In the case of long term mental illnesses (such like bipolar disorder); there are 5 distinct stages that most people commonly went through. It is Denial; Anger/ Resentment; Bargaining; Depression & Acceptance.

Ah well, now I strongly suspect that in regards to our own long term global "illness", the global warming; we've finally come to the stage of Acceptance.

And these images by Studio Lindfors; is a solid proof of it.


Read more of this awesome work at BLDGBLOG; and see more of the pics here

When I first saw these kind of images (also in BLDGBLOG) done by Pedro Armestre and Mario Gómez; I was freaking out.






I think it freaks everybody out.

Now looking back at these images by Studio Lindfors, well, maybe it's time for to come to terms with this inevitable situation; and hell, try to embrace it, and find the good side & beauty of it ...?

After all, every debt has to be paid, and this debt the industrialists has on the world's environment also has to be paid. With the lives of billions of people and every forms of life on the face of Earth.

Design 2050 : Possibilities for Tomorrow


As you can see in the above pic, the 2009 Singapore Design Festival title is Design 2050 : Possibilities for Tomorrow. A biennial event which I'm lucky enough to see this year. :) Heck, I might not be still living here next year. Anyway, the overall score is good and enlightening. Definitely inspiring, although sadly few of the events that I want to attend is either closed on weekends or fully booked. :(

Below are random arrays of the exhibition in one of the Design Hub; the City Hall.
And as my twitter-friend @artshyster said, "Visual artists interested in visuals not words"; so you won't see much of my writing on the design concept explanation. You can just google it. Here you will see visual inspirations. Things that catch my eye and would be quite useful as a design inspiration. Although sadly sometimes it wouldn't show any of the actual artwork/ design exhibited.

The the credits of each installation will of course be written. :)

Enjoy! :)


Title : Floating 2050
Artist : Marina Milosavljevic



Title : Polish Architects Exhibition 2009


Title : Singapore Souvenir
This is the most clever souvenir! I always have a hard time differentiating between Kopi, Kopi O, Kopi C and the likes of it. Something that's definitely "Uniquely Singaporean". But with this "color chart"; I wouldn't be lost anymore! :D


Title : Mobile : Vehicles & Platforms
Artist : Anita Nevens



Title : Sustainab.Italy




Title : CCC Character Festival
Artists : Atelier Sango, Planet Planter, Hexa Project



Title : V for Vase
Artist : Hans Tan Studio




Title : Beyond Typography - Singapore Pangram

Now this is also one exhibition that allow us to explore a whole lot of different experience. But the room is too dark for me to take any pictures. Maybe it's better to leave it in the dark, and just put it as a reminder for a good spatial & visual experience. What's left above are the ones that can be easily photographed.

Plastiquarium by David Edgar

A beautiful art indeed.

And made of recycled materials too! But it kind of freaked me out a bit, because I see it as a constant reminder that our world is already in it's critical condition.. And we can't continue to live in indulgence as we always do..







Click here to learn more about David Edgar and his art.

:D

Iceberg Art






These beautiful pictures is taken by Oyvind Tangen, a Norwegian sailor.

go to Treehugger for more amazing images and full story