Latest Breaking News On - குவாலியா சமகால கலை - Page 1 : comparemela.com
Cherry Blossom Festival; Fair Food Drive-Thru: NorCal Weekend
patch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from patch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Painting architecture: Tommy Fitzpatrick’s fractured modernist visions
Painting architecture: Tommy Fitzpatrick’s fractured modernist visions
Tommy Fitzpatrick’s new series of electric-hued architectural paintings capture the American artist’s 30-year fascination with modernism
Tommy Fitzpatrick,
Complex, 2021
Tommy Fitzpatrick has long had a fascination with how buildings are made. Growing up in the Dallas suburbs, the downtown urban environment became a magnet. ‘I’ve always liked modernism and Bauhaus, and found that urban areas had a similar quality of newness and futurism,’ he tells Wallpaper .
An exhibition of new paintings, titled ‘Site’, at Qualia Contemporary Art in Palo Alto, California, marks a departure in Fitzpatrick’s conventional approach: instead of painting from life or photographs, he turned to computer-aided design (CAD) software to create renderings that he then translated into paint. ‘When it comes to architecture, I often find my
Qualia Contemporary Art opens a solo exhibition by Chinese-American artist Stella Zhang
Internal Landscape-Limbi 1.
PALO ALTO, CA
.-Qualia Contemporary Art is presenting Internal Landscape, a solo exhibition by Chinese-American artist, Stella Zhang, featuring paintings, mixed media works and installation. The artist continues her ten-year exploration of the body with new works that act as a meditation on Zhangs acute awareness of the internal and external body and how it not only carries consciousness, but intuition. Internal Landscape is open to the public from Feb. 11, 2021 through April 2, 2021. The gallery will be hosting a Zoom opening celebration on Feb. 13, at 7:30 pm PST. RSVP is required .
By Samantha Pires on December 23, 2020
Artist, environmentalist, and Ohio University professor John Sabraw has a unique process for sourcing new paint supplies. You are more likely to find him waist-deep in reddish-brown water in southeast Ohio than you are in a traditional craft store. Sabraw found a way to create “toxic” paint from the acid mining drainage that discolors streams. As abandoned mines have drained iron oxide over the course of many years, the environment have become unlivable for aquatic life and less used by humans.
For Sabraw, this isn’t just a creative exercise or science experiment to create colors from an available resource he and his colleagues want to make a real change to the water. After partnering with Guy Riefler, another instructor at Ohio University, a new project began with the intention of cleaning the water and increasing the production of paint made from th
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.