Pancha Tantra

walton-ford-dying-words

Surfing the net, not looking for anything in particulair .. STOP, what is this?  .. Walton Ford, who is  .. how is it possible I .. want that ..  have to go to New York .. absolutely .. Taschen website  .. Panacha Tantra .. 

 ”I can’t afford one of his paintings (or even this book) but I can dream.”

Naturalist-gone-nuclear’s intricate, dazzling, and sometimes disturbing life-size watercolors. All  painted with great technical skill. At first glance you think antiques until you notice some animals are engaged in ‘unnatural’ behavior. Walton Ford is Audubon on acid

Website: www.paulkasmingallery.com


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Made in China

wok

Seemingly innocent children toys act as a kind of space invaders emerging from a world hidden inside our childhood memories. Here they invade antique Chinese furniture, threatening their traditional past. These toys reveal a surreal and terrifying landscape of derailed trains, drowning babies, crashing planes and wild dinosaurs. They make me question my self-constructed environments, shake up my make-believe worlds and throw them off centre. Out of the confusion a far more powerful world develops, beyond the clarity of logic.

Inside the chaos there is often another unexplored world, offering new possibilities in sense making.

The work of Wokmedia is primarily concerned with the emotional experience, an archetypal memory or a physical sensation. Often they survey the state in-between: where structure emerges from chaos and confusion is beginning to make sense. Out of devastation and destruction they create a new world. A world imbedded in their childhood memories when emotions were not expected to be filtered, when make-believe was not equated with lunacy.

Website: www.wokmedia.com

 

Solid Poetry

solid-poetry-1

It has been really nice weather for quite a while now but make no mistake; I live in a country where it actually rains a lot. Like most people here I hate rain! It seems some Dutch designers got inspired by that sentiment.

First Gerwin Hoogendoorn came up with the  SENZ, a truly revolutionary umbrella. Now, Frederik Molenschot & Susanne Happle introduced their Solid Poetry tiles in Milan, the design only shows itself when it rains. Then, the water exposes leaves and flowers in the material of the tile, changing the environment in a surprising way and leaving a wonderful pavement that literally grows under your feet.

Let it rain!

Website: www.frederikmolenschot.nl

Let the plants design!

namaiki

Sometimes I forget about an artist for a while. So when I rediscovered the Namaiki book in my libary I googeled them to see what they’re up to these days.
What a pleasant surprise!
Namaiki which means naughty or rebel in Japanese is actually graphic designer David Duval Smith and architect Michael Frank. They’ve been doing insanely colourful objects and installations, mad graphics and psychedelic videos since the mid-’90s.
And now they added another level to their fun and light-hearted installations by switching literally to more natural grounds.

Want to know more about their inspiring thoughts as to why ending up working with living things is just the most interesting thing to do…, here is a great interview with the Namaiki Designers published in PingMag.

Website: namaiki.com

Temporary Sculpture

martin-klimas1

Combining the silence of Edward Muybridge’s pictures with the association-rich composition of a still life, Martin Klimas breaks recognizable objects so they become something else, and stops us just at the moment of transformation. And it’s this moment of transformation that provides for us something that we normally cannot see. It is an in-between state where rest and motion can exist together.

Website: www.martin-klimas.de

New traces of the brush

andre-kneib

Actually I didn’t know much about Chinese calligraphy techniques but since this work (HAN) caught my attention I did a little research. So I learned that to understand Chinese calligraphy first thing you have to know that in Chinese society script has a close connection with language and art.
There was a huge difference. In Western society we see the words and not the writing. But words have a sound, a movement, they even a texture and there was André Kneib who made this all visible to me.
Starting with a single Chinese character inspired by a feeling or experience, he infuses traditionally monochromatic characters with color, using lyrical abstraction coupled with calligraphy techniques
His characters come to life because of the varying pressure and movement of his brushstrokes, expressing emotions and physical engagement and capture the inner essence of the word.

Show: www.contrastsgalery.com

Dawn

ruud-van-empel

Ruud van Empel used to design, among other things, the sets for the wacky misadventures of my absolute favorite Dutch television series for kids called Theo & Thea. I was still in art school back then, studying scenography, and he was one of my inspirators. So at first when I heard of his decision in to turn his back on film and television because of his irritation about its growing commercialization I was truly disappointed.

 Until I laid eyes on his digital photo collages and found they absolutely justified his decision. He still cuts, glues and manipulates to create new worlds only now using a computer as his paintbrush and not limited in any way anymore, the results are astonishing.

His photos may look quite realistic, but what they represent has in fact never existed. They are creations, subtly and meticulously composed by combining as many as 100 images into a single scene and almost too perfect to be true, every detail, every color is sublimated.

But you only have to look a little bit closer to at all that perfect greener-than-green scenery to know that there is something malicious lurking beneath the surface, a nameless, indefinable threat, but nonetheless present everywhere. A feeling of disquiet crawls under your skin and will remain with you for quite a while.

Website: www.ruudvanempel.nl
Show: gallery Terra in Tokio, Japan, April 18 – May 23, 2009

Looking aside

pieter-hugo

A couple of weeks ago I read an article about albinism in Africa. Albinism is a congenital disorder that affects skin pigmentation. In most African countries it can lead to expulsion and discrimination. Albinism is referred to as ‘sope’, meaning something magical inhabited by powerful evil spirits; albinos sometimes are even hunted for their body parts, which are supposed to be useful for curing various diseases.  

It made me wonder whether this could all be filed under lack of education as the article lets us believe. Or, could it be the case that we share collective prejudices only slightly  curbed by education? What can we do about our own prejudices, then?

Pieter Hugo confronts us with these prejudices as we look at his frontal portraits. Here we see what we usually choose to look at from the corners of our eyes. His series: Looking Aside (2003/2005) not only questions why we are so awkward when we encounter people who are unusual in some way but at the same time also force us to think about the meaning of ‘black’ and ‘white’.

Website: www.pieterhugo.com

NY street life photographer Helen Levitt died

helen-levitt

Helen Levitt (New York City) American photographer, 1913 – 2009

Inspired by her mentors and friends, Walker Evans and Henri Cartier Bresson, Helen Levitt made – for most of the 1940s – black and white photos of children in Spanish Harlem in New York. Her portraits of young children are among the strongest in the history of photography and set the tone for a new documentary style of American photography.

She also was a pioneer in the area of color photographs. Her photos are visual poems in which shape, color and movement play a major role.
In 2008 Levitt received the SPECTRUM prize, the Internationaler Preis für Fotografie der Stiftung Niedersachsen, which was accompanied by a new book:Fotografien 1937-1991.

Super Flat

murakami

‘Super Flat artists create their own version of popular culture to draw attention to the dominance of media, entertainment and consumption,’ 村上

Takashi Murakami, has made his final pit-stop over in Spain at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao after stops in Los Angeles, New York and Germany.With a complete selection of over 90 works in different media he has created a dizzying world filled with mood flowers, singing moss, magic mushrooms and morphing creatures and  he didn’t stop at the museum. So imagine an entire city packaged with Murakami’s bright palette of pop, the flatness of traditional Japanese art and some Surrealist movement elements.

Now I’m only waiting for a jellyfish eyed plain to take me there.