دسته: نقشه‌کشی و مدل‌سازی

  • In ‘I’m Listening,’ Barry McGee Celebrates Positivity in Amid Distress and Overwhelm — Colossal

    In ‘I’m Listening,’ Barry McGee Celebrates Positivity in Amid Distress and Overwhelm — Colossal


    Barry McGee lives in San Francisco—he was born there and he lives there,” critic and curator Richard Leydier opens in an essay accompanying the artist’s current solo exhibition, I’m Listening, at Perrotin. “This fact is important because his art would be profoundly different had he chosen to move to another American city.”

    McGee draws inspiration from the West Coast subculture he grew up within, surrounded by skaters, surfers, and street artists. He has long been interested in marginalized communities, societal outcasts, and those seen as subversive.

    installation view of an exhibition in a white-walled gallery space with numerous prints, paintings, and sculptures in a variety of shapes and colors all over the walls

    The artist is a key figure of the Mission School, which emerged in the early 1990s through the work of a number of artists who were connected to the now-defunct San Francisco Art Institute. Other influential artists include Margaret Kilgallen (1967-2001), Ruby Neri, Claire Rojas, and more, all of whom explore the intersections between urban realism, graffiti, American folk art, and “lowbrow” aesthetics undergirded by social activism.

    McGee adopted monikers like “Twist” and “Lydia Fong” in his own graffiti writing and also explored painting and printmaking, which he still taps into in his expansive, multidisciplinary practice. He explores “dynamic panel assemblages, complex patterns reminiscent of op art, and immersive installations that explore the human condition,” the gallery says.

    I’m Listening erupts with color, pattern, and texture through a bounty of sculptures, paintings, prints, and assemblages that reimagine everyday objects. Surfboards are cloaked in optical geometric patterns in acrylic paint, and McGee’s signature grimacing, cartoonish faces appear on collages or in place of labels on glass bottles.

    “I focus on everything that is shitty on our little planet right now,” McGee says. Expressions of disgust or surprise are paired with playfulness, though. He adds, “I also celebrate all these incredible things that humans invent to stay positive and healthy.” I’m Listening continues through May 24 in Paris.

    two square geometric paintings, one green and one orange, situated next to each other in a white-walled gallery space
    installation view of an exhibition in a white-walled gallery space with numerous prints, paintings, and sculptures in a variety of shapes and colors all over the walls
    installation view of an exhibition in a white-walled gallery space with numerous prints, paintings, and sculptures in a variety of shapes and colors all over the walls
    a detail of a large-scale installation along a white gallery wall, which looks like a giant slumped surface that is completely covered in a grid of tiny images
    a print with wide stripes in green and bright orange with two images of cartoonish men making frowning or surprised expressions
    installation view of an exhibition in a white-walled gallery space with numerous prints, paintings, and sculptures in a variety of shapes and colors all over the walls



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  • “Strange Nature” by Photographer Delaney Allen

    “Strange Nature” by Photographer Delaney Allen


    A selection of images from American photographer Delaney Allen (previously featured here). Allen continues his exploration of the American West with his series “Strange Nature.” Highlighting the unique and mystical through a dark colour palette as well as black and white imagery, the familiar becomes strange and distorted:

    “Similar to the approach in the previous series Red Orange, I have been approaching the work with the idea of the artist hand in creating a unique approach to photographing nature. This allows for an otherworldly feel both by the subjects I’m photographing and by the means in which I capture them. I’m aiming for simple beauty and confusion.”

    The project is available in book form through UK-based publisher Jane & Jeremy.





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  • Grant Harder – BOOOOOOOM! – CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS

    Grant Harder – BOOOOOOOM! – CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS


    For our third annual Booooooom Photo Awards, supported by Format, we selected 5 winners, one for each of the following categories: Portrait, Street, Colour, Nature, Fashion. You can view all the winners and shortlisted photographers here. Now it is our pleasure to introduce the winner of the Nature category, Grant Harder.

    Grant Harder lives in Vancouver with his wife and two kids. Whether he’s photographing people or places his desire is to capture an honest image (as honest as a photo can be), and it’s clear he has a deep appreciation for nature.

    We want to give a massive shoutout to Format for supporting the awards this year. Format is an online portfolio builder specializing in the needs of photographers, artists, and designers. With nearly 100 professionally designed website templates and thousands of design variables, you can showcase your work your way, with no coding required. To learn more about Format, check out their website here or start a 14-day free trial.

    We had the chance to ask Grant some questions about his photography—check out the interview below along with some of his work.





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  • From Miniature to Massive, Boundless Landscapes Spill Out of Frame in Barry Hazard’s Paintings — Colossal

    From Miniature to Massive, Boundless Landscapes Spill Out of Frame in Barry Hazard’s Paintings — Colossal


    Confined within tiny, ornate frames until inevitably spilling over the edge, Barry Hazard’s expansive landscapes are “spaces for reflecting, contemplation, and surrendering to something larger and more timeless than us,” he says.

    Inspired by vast notions such as the relationship between humans and nature and ecological conflict, Hazard (previously) translates broad themes into miniature works. The Brooklyn-based artist employs minuscule frames, wood panel, and acrylic to depict a multitude of scenes from mudslides and flower farms to glaciers and snowy roads. With so much contained in such small compositions, Hazard describes his process as “a simple way to rapidly engage in an artistic process, with an ultra-manageable scale.”

    a miniature painting depicting a farm landscape spilling out of the ornate frame
    “Flower Farm” (2024), 6 x 5 x 7 inches

    Last year for New York’s Upstate Art Weekend, the artist expanded upon his miniature work, delving into a project on the opposite end of the scale of proportions. “Walk-In Painting” culminates Hazard’s carpentry and muralist experience, uniquely activating his otherwise tiny paintings. Viewers are able to step into a rolling scenery teeming with vibrant blooms, tufts of bushes, and sweeping mountains in the distance, creating an experience that is “both fictional and non-fictional,” the artist explains.

    Hazard has also ventured into the realm of batch production through the technique of resin casting. While the artist typically uses more traditional materials for his small works, he has been able to create a sizable amount of gifts for friends and family by creating numerous blank casted bases before painting each by hand.

    Find more work on the artist’s website, and take a look into his process on Instagram.

    a miniature painting depicting a landscape spilling out of the ornate frame
    “Mudslide” (2024), 9 x 7 x 2 inches
    a very large, "walk-in" painting situated in a grassy environment. the installation consists of a massive ornate gold frame, and a hilly green landscape inside.
    “Walk-In Painting” (2024), 8 x 10 x 7 feet
    “Purple Plain” (2023), 1 x 1.5 inches
    a miniature painting depicting a landscape spilling out of the ornate frame
    “Sunset Glacier” (2023), 9 x 8 x 2 inches
    a miniature painting depicting a landscape spilling out of the ornate frame
    a grid of miniature paintings, each depicting a landscape spilling out of the ornate frame with a tiny car driving on a winding dirt road
    a miniature painting depicting a teal landscape spilling out of the ornate frame. more paintings of the same dominating color are affixed to a white wall in the background
    a miniature painting depicting a flooded landscape spilling out of the ornate frame
    “Flood Zone” (2024), 8 x 7 x 3 inches
    a gloved hands holds up a blank resin cast of the a miniature landscape painting spilling out of an ornate frame. there are dozens more casted in the background, waiting to be painted
    dozens of miniature paintings depicting winter landscapes spilling out of ornate frames, affixed to a white wall in a colorful gradient from yellow, to pink, to purple, and teal





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  • Charles Brooks Photographs the Interiors of Musical and Scientific Instruments — Colossal

    Charles Brooks Photographs the Interiors of Musical and Scientific Instruments — Colossal


    A Synchrotron is one of several types of particle accelerators, speeding up electrons, protons, and various other subatomic particles along a cyclical path. The powerful machine serves as a circular speedway with a synchronized magnetic field, emitting high energy X-rays that allow researchers to render details at atomic and molecular levels—all of which would be impossible to view with more ordinary scientific tools and techniques.

    This formidable concept of capturing the unseen lies at the core of Charles Brooks’ work, as he photographs the small but vast interiors of musical—and most recently scientific—instruments.

    the interior of a Geminhardt Elkhardt Alto Flute
    “Geminhardt Elkhardt Alto Flute”

    Continuing his Architecture in Music series, one of the photographer’s latest highlights has been working with a 1717 Stradivarius violin. Describing the stringed subject as one of the most extraordinary instruments he’s captured so far, he shares, “it was a rare opportunity, and photographing it was both an honor and one of the most nerve-wracking shoots I’ve undertaken.”

    The photographer’s recent exploration of the Australian Synchrotron may foreshadow an exciting shift into a new realm of instruments. In the meantime, you can find more on Brooks’ website and Instagram.

    the interior of a 1717 Stradivarius violin
    “1717 Stradivarius Violin”
    the interior of a Larilee Elkhart Oboe
    “Larilee Elkhart Oboe”
    the interior of a 1770 Chappuy Violin
    “1770 Chappuy Violin”
    an artist at work in a studio with a photography setup





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  • “Caspian” by Photographer Khashayar Javanmardi

    “Caspian” by Photographer Khashayar Javanmardi


    A stunning collection of photos by Persian artist and photographer Khashayar Javanmardi. Javanmardi studied architecture at Guilan University of Art and Architecture in Iran then moved to Denmark and graduated in photojournalism from Danish Media and Journalism School in 2021. While he is now based in Lausanne, Switzerland, Javanmardi grew up on the shores of the Caspian Sea—a body of water surrounded by Iran on the South, Russia on the North, Azerbaijan to the West, and Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan on the East. The Caspian Sea sees approximately 122,000 tons of pollutants from the coastal states enter the marine environment every year.

    Having witnessed the effects of unregulated exploitation, pollution, overfishing, and climate change first hand, Javanmardi’s ongoing project captures the environmental crisis and the lives of local inhabitants whose existence becomes smaller and poorer as the once-abundant resource diminishes. Javanmardi’s documentary approach is both observational and a form of activism, as it speaks to the urgency of our current environmental moment.

    The project has been released as a photo book. Caspian: A Southern Reflection is available now via Loose Joints Publishing.





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  • Tiff Massey Celebrates Detroit Culture and Style in Monumental Mixed-Media Installations — Colossal

    Tiff Massey Celebrates Detroit Culture and Style in Monumental Mixed-Media Installations — Colossal


    From larger-than-life double-bobble hair bands to a wall of elaborate braids, Tiff Massey spotlights distinctive Detroit style. Trained as a metalsmith, the artist employs the power of material and scale to highlight the city’s neighborhoods and Black identity and culture.

    7 Mile + Livernois, Massey’s solo exhibition at the Detroit Institute of Arts, takes inspiration from the crossroads at the heart of the city’s Black business and fashion district, where the artist grew up. The area will soon be home to a new arts and community space that Massey is spearheading in an effort to guide and celebrate local kinship.

    large metal sculptures resembling avant garde rings, installed in a black-painted museum gallery
    “Everyday Arsenal” (2018)

    Personal adornment is central to the artist’s expression, which she channels through jewelry, sculptures, and mixed-media assemblages to underscore Black style with a focus on her hometown. “Whatupdoe” and “Everyday Arsenal,” for example, respectively transform a contemporary chain necklace and silver rings into monumental installations, creating terrains of portal-like tunnels and interlocked angles.

    The “ancestral flyness” of the artist’s parents and previous generations also provides a limitless well of inspiration. “How they adorned themselves has definitely been influential not only to how I adorn myself but also to the ideas that I have within the works,” Massey says in an interview for the DIA exhibition catalogue. “Detroiters, when we step outside, we step outside. We want people to see it. We want people to see us. And that has left a tremendous impression on me.”

    7 Mile + Livernois continues through May 11. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

    a wall installation of several oversized red ball hair ties on a black wall
    “Baby Bling” (2023)
    a museum installation of large cubic metal frames interlocked in a giant jumble, inside of a room painted black
    “Whatupdoe” (2024)
    a detail of an art installation of numerous green wigs in a variety of braided styles on a black wall
    Detail of “I’ve Got Bundles and I Got Flewed Out (Green)”





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  • The Pure Street Photography Competition Spotlights Humor and Chance Amid the Ordinary — Colossal

    The Pure Street Photography Competition Spotlights Humor and Chance Amid the Ordinary — Colossal


    Founded in 2020, Pure Street Photography celebrates a diverse array of captivating sights and image-makers around the globe. Coincidental timing, uncanny interactions, and moments that are stranger-than-fiction figure prominently in the platforms’s curation.

    To support their community, founders Dimpy Bhalotia and Kamal Kumaar Rao launched a grant competition earlier this year, with winners announced this week. Topping the contest is Ayanava Sil’s “Crown of Fire,” which captures the instantaneous chaos during a Diwali celebration as a child dashes with sparkling streaks trailing behind. “It’s a flash of magic caught in time, where light, joy, and imagination come together in one unforgettable frame,” Sil says.

    a kid running with sparklers appearing to stream from his head
    Ayanava Sil (India), “Crown of Fire”

    Others include Amy Horowitz’s bizarre image of an older woman clutching her bag while an enormous snake slithers up to the window where she’s seated. Joanna M. similarly builds curiosity tinged with the absurd as she photographs a proud beagle posing for paparazzi.

    See more of the contest’s winners below, and follow Pure Street Photography’s Instagram, a trove of visual wit and chance encounters.

    a woman sitting with her back to the camera on the right side of the bench, while two feet dangle over the left side
    Anna Marzia Soria (Italy), “Optical Illusion”
    people surround a dog sitting on a velvet blue sofa at a table to take its photo
    Joanna M. (United States), “Celebrity”
    a person appears like a walking shadow
    Holger Kunze (Belgium), “The Double”
    a kid in the grass with his legs up is surrounded by dozens of figurative shadows
    Valeria Ciardulli (Italy), “Spectators”
    a cat walks through a hole in a drawn deity on a wall
    Julachart Pleansanit (Thailand), “Rahu”
    a black and white image of a child swinging with her shadow seeming to swing on the ground below
    Mary Crnkovic Pilas (Croatia), “Sweet Bird of Youth”





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  • Through Surreal Paintings, Shyama Golden Reincarnates a Mythic Narrative — Colossal

    Through Surreal Paintings, Shyama Golden Reincarnates a Mythic Narrative — Colossal


    When Shyama Golden would find herself disappointed as a child, her parents would often respond with “too bad, so sad, maybe next birth.” Invoking reincarnation and the possibilities of an alternative life, this phrase continues to reinvent itself in Golden’s practice.

    On view next month at PM/AM, Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth presents a collection of lush paintings filled with surreal details, earthly textures, and a recurring blue-faced character. As with earlier series, the artist invents a vast, magical narrative that flows through each of the works, this time as a four-act performance.

    a figure with green fur and a blue face sits in a surreal garden with a hand stretching out from a bush
    “Bevis Bawa Garden, 1936” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 60 inches

    The mythical storyline unfolds with a collection of diptychs comprised of a large-scale scene and a close-up companion offering another perspective. These pairings visualize a sort of alternative past for the artist as she explores the inexorable twining of personal agency and larger forces like fate and collective experiences that shape our identities.

    In Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth, Golden opens with her blue-faced alter ego named Maya, a rendition of the Sri Lankan folklore tricksters known as yakkas. Dressed in a fur suit, the character lies in the roadway, her chest split open to reveal a bright red wound. A bag of oranges is littered nearby.

    The counterpart to this titular work is a self-portrait of the artist barefoot, posed against the rocky roadside. She stands atop cracked pavement while oranges spill blood-red juice on the ground. Introspective yet invoking the universal, the pair grasps at the tension between unexpected violence and death, whether metaphoric or real, and the ability to find resilience in the face of adversity.

    Golden’s series continues to unravel as a series of contrasts. She considers fame, erasure, and where freedom resides within the two, along with the notion of sole creative geniuses mistakenly thought to operate outside the whole. And in “Mexican Texas, 1862,” the artist tackles the porous, if not arbitrarily drawn, boundaries that tie us to states and nations and ultimately, change over time.

    a woman in a yellow tank top and yellow pants stands barefoot against a green and blue tinged rocky background
    “Stories of My Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 36 inches

    In addition to her oil paintings for this exhibition, Golden is collaborating on an animated video project with her husband, the director Paul Trillo, who will build an AI model trained exclusively on Golden’s paintings. Given the hesitation by many artists about the role of artificial intelligence and intellectual property, the pair is interested in confronting the issue from the perspective of influence and the myth of the lone genius. Golden writes:

    Many artists who are canonized are actually working in a style that they didn’t invent but that was part of a movement arising out of their time and location. AI is deeply unsettling to artists in the West because we romanticise the artist as a singular figure, who is only influenced by one to three other clearly defined artists, giving them a lineage of artistic inheritance and perceived value.

    Golden also ties this idea to “the clout needed to command a price for our work,” which she suggests is simply another narrative device in the act of self-mythologizing.

    If you’re in London, Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth runs from May 23 to July 1. Find more from Golden on her website and Instagram.

    a furry figure with a blue face lies on a pink landscape with a horse galloping away in the background
    “Mexican Texas, 1862” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 60 inches
    a figure in yellow stands atop a giant blue head floating in the sky. she holds onto trees, one full of fruit and the other barren
    “A Myth of My Own Creation” (2025), oil on linen, 66 x 48 inches
    the back of a brown mask atop a pink tinged streetscape
    “You Seeing What I’m Seeing” (2025), oil on linen, 48 x 48 inches
    a green bird appears to see itself in a mirror against a purple backdrop
    “The Sound of One Bird Colliding” (2025), oil on linen, 24 x 30 inches





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  • Unwind with the Ancient Japanese Art of Kumiko, a Wood Joinery Technique — Colossal

    Unwind with the Ancient Japanese Art of Kumiko, a Wood Joinery Technique — Colossal


    If you’re familiar with the Japanese art of wood joinery, you’ll likely find kumiko equally intriguing. The traditional craft emerged in the Asuka era between about 600 and 700 C.E. and similarly eschews nails in favor of perfectly cut pieces that notch into place. Intricate fields of florals and geometric shapes emerge, creating a decorative panel that typically covers windows or divides a room.

    A video from The Process, a YouTube channel exploring various manufacturing sectors and hand-crafted techniques, visits the workshop of Kinoshita Mokuge. Viewers are welcomed into the meticulous, labor-intensive process of producing elaborate, interlocked motifs. Japanese Arts also offered a glimpse into this art form a few years back during an equally calming visit to Kurozu Tetsuo’s studio.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbPL7PqZetQ

    an in progress wooden motif

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESI2n2lvhoo



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