A team from Taiwan has been shortlisted in the London International Creative Competition’s (LICC) Create (art) category for their experimental sculpture titled <i>Pump</i>.
The annual international competition looks for “the world’s most fresh and progressive creative” talent, its Web site says.
The team, led by Cho Yen-ting (卓彥廷), an associate professor at National Cheng Kung University’s (NCKU) Institute of Creative Industries Design, has been searching for a connection between human and digital creativity, hoping to take digital art to a wider audience.
<i>Pump</i> was created using an advanced printing technique and is carved by computers. It explores the decomposition and recomposition of data
As part of efforts aimed at celebrating Nigeria’s 61st independence anniversary, the Oshodi Arts Foundation, whose primary focus is unearthing talents all over the country and positioning them strategically, invited more than 20 secondary schools in the state for lessons on visual arts.