Marylaura Mau spends ample time searching, cutting and collecting images from printed treasures she finds like magazines, pamphlets, and books, in order to compose her collages.
Marylaura Mau spends ample time searching, cutting and collecting images from printed treasures she finds like magazines, pamphlets, and books, in order to compose her collages.
So inspired by this breathtaking project by one of my favorite architects Tadao Ando in collaboration with the amazing visionary artist Bosco Soti..
“Where are you from?” It’s a question that few can say that they have never been asked. An icebreaker, a survey datum, a search for common ground—or, depending on the circumstances, a way of evaluating, and sometimes even insulting, someone.
While the portrait as a photographic form most often attempts to capture the subjectivity of an individual, many of Sarah Tulloch’s collages in Object Image take the impersonal and vague elements of an image as their object, leaving the subject to struggle for visibility behind them.
What a perfect title for a deliriously, ravishing ode to youthful self-discovery and passionate embrace of the artistic life and all of it’s sensations in dedication to the making of art. This is Jodorowsky’s story and it is absolutely who he is as an artist. A virtuosic polymath - artist, writer, actor, poet, filmmaker, philosopher, and shaman - he he is prolific in the extreme.
Telephone antennae, construction cranes, and electrical wires break the horizon in dark, geometric silhouettes: these man-made electrical units stand in direct contrast to a lightning bolt’s rivulets of white above.
Porn lovers gathered this past weekend for the first ever Brooklyn Dirty Book Fair at Point Green Studio in Greenpoint.
However, in Steve Miller’s X-ray photos, the interstices represent not the individual but rather the shared medium of all life, the porous material through which energy is disseminated, which expands when granted and shrivels when refused.
Lewk Wilmshurst displays humor and a keen commentary on history and how our modern technological society interact with each other in his digital collages.
Photographer Naomi Harris went on a mission during Trump’s first 100 days in office to document both democrats and republicans across the nation. She traversed a total of 19,000 miles, photographing people from Washington DC to Palm Beach, Florida, the Bible and Rust Belts.