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Android Jones

Android Jones

Mark Jenkins // Street Installations - StumbleUpon Kristiansand, Norway London, England Montreal, Canada Cologne, Germany Besançon Rome Rio de Janeiro Tudela London Dublin Moscow Winston-Salem Seoul Royan Bordeaux Puerto del Rosario Barcelona Malmö Washington DC Washington, DC Adam Scott Miller Zilda Des personnages mythologiques, littéraires ou iconographiques sont téléportés sur les murs de Naples, Paris ou Lorient. Des icônes oubliées et des héros déchus semblent trainer leurs guêtres sur le pavé ou caresser les murs du bout des doigts. La rue devient le décor de nos mémoires: c’est le travail de l’artiste rennais Zilda. © Zilda Plasticien autodidacte, Zilda travaille ses œuvres papier en atelier. Zilda ne revendique qu’une seule référence dans le domaine de l’art de rue: Ernest Pignon Ernest. La première série de collages de Zilda, «A même le temps», représente d’émouvantes femmes nues cachant leurs visages bouleversés au détour d’une cage d’escalier ou d’une usine aussi abandonnées qu’elles. Zilda a ensuite élaboré les portraits d’anonymes emblématiques de Rennes intitulés «Je suis un éphémère». © Zilda, Christophe © Zilda, Yves Pasdelou © Zilda, Louis-Ferdinand Céline © Zilda, Mamma Roma © Zilda, Il ladro di biciclette © Zilda, Ladri di biciclette © Zilda, Il Bidone © Zilda, Phaëthon

Brom 3D Grass Globe Illusion at Paris City Hall If you are a panda and read this magazine daily, you’ve probably already seen The 5 Most Talented 3D Sidewalk Artists or Anamorphic Typography by Joseph Egan. These amazing 3D illusions were made using a projection called anamorphosis which allows to create the illusion of three dimensions when viewed from the correct angle. Today, we want to show you another wonderful 3D illusion which is installed in front of the steps of Paris’s city hall. French artist François Abélanet created this incredible 3-dimensional grass globe with the help of about ninety workers and called it ‘Qui croire?’ Website: francois-abelanet.com Images © Déborah Lesage / Mairie de Paris , © Discover Paris!

Cameron Grey Hari & Deepti | Black Book Gallery Hari & Deepti’s work is a Pandora box full of stories and imagination that they bring to life through their intricate paper cut light boxes and paper clay sculptures. They have always been drawn towards the imaginative aspect of story telling. Stories have so many shades and depth in them, and paper as a medium has the exact qualities to reflect and interpret them. They started experimenting with paper cut shadow boxes in 2010 with hand painted watercolor paper which was then cut and assembled in a wooden box to create a diorama, with years of practice their art became more intricate and minimal at the same time. “What amazes us about the paper cut light boxes is the dichotomy of the piece in its lit and unlit state, the contrast is so stark that it has this mystical effect on the viewers.”

Connecticut College Art Collections including Visual Resources Special Collections Studio Art Dept Art History Dept Museum Studies Architectural Studies

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