Sculptures Made from Suspended Sewing Buttons by Augusto Esquivel Augusto Esquivel is an artist from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Represented by the Now Contemporary Art Gallery in Miami. Augusto creates stunning scupltures by using thousands of suspended multi-coloured sewing buttons… Augusto Esquivel | Via Now contemporary art Augusto Esquivel est un artiste de Buenos Aires, en Argentine. A Helium-filled Kinetic Drawing Sculpture by Karina Smigla-Bobinski ADA – Analog Interactive Installation, is a kinetic sculpture by German-based artist Karina Smigla-Bobinski. The installation is made form an enormous helium-inflated sphere trapped inside a small room that’s spiked with dozens of protruding charcoal pieces which scrape the edges of the gallery wall as participants push, toss, and otherwise manipulate it. Most recently it was on display at the Electronic Language International Festival in São Paulo this Summer that took place in São Paulo. It’s fascinating to me that given the constraints of the sphere and room, a single outcome (pictured at bottom) is destined to emerge, but yet requires the participation of dozens if not hundreds of gallery visitors. Reminds me of the work of Roman Ondák. (via we make money not art, photos courtesy we make money not art, s.antonio, and the artist)
La danseuse, un cygne comme les autres - Danses avec la plume Mercredi 6 juin. Swan de Luc Petton au Théâtre de Chaillot. Avec Anaïs Barthe, Delphine Berdiel, Aurore Castan-Aïn, Aurore Godfroy, Katia Petrowick et Marie Sinnaeve. Ahhh, le cygne dans la danse... Le début de Swan fait néanmoins un peu peur. Heureusement, au bout de cinq minutes, Luc Petton s'éloigne bien vite de ce travers, pour plonger et battre des ailes dans la danse. Les danseuses ne sont pas seulement cygnes, elles font aussi partie d'un troupeau. Car autre ambiance pour la deuxième. Par rapport à la séance de travail, le lien entre êtres humains et cygnes se fait plus naturellement.
Kymapetra singing stones from scenocosme Sometimes we have some special attention with certain minerals and stones. Their various forms are forged by time. Broken, polished, composite or fossilized, each one have natural vibration, and history. Certain legends, explain that stones can sing or have energy. In the interactive installation kymapetra we have an artistic and poetic approach on these various beliefs. The artwork is made of 5 stones and a central basin with water. The spectator puts their hands above the stones Sound vibrations appears at the water surface Kymapetra Kymapetra
Fantastic Kinetic Sculptures by Limee Young South Korean artist Limee Young makes these diabolically complex kinetic sculptures using stainless steel components, embedded cpu boards, microprocessors, servos, and other mechanical doodads I’m not going to even pretend to understand. The devices seem to have no practical function other than being completely mesmerizing in a strangely perfect way. You can read a bit more about the devices on his blog and see a couple larger images on mu-um.
MARC FORNES & THEVERYMANY™ | ART + ARCHITECTURE ^ COMPUTATION [ Python / Rhinocommon SDK ] FINE COLLECTION OF CURIOUS SOUND OBJECTS The arrangement includes six exceptional exhibits from the world of sounds and acoustics. At first sight looking trivial, each object incorporates a very unique ability. The magical character of each object is accompanied with a little story, almost completely concealing the existence of technical components such as speakers or sensors. Only small connection ports as well as the uniform black finishing point to thier unusual abilities. In form and functionalty all these exhibits pursue John Maeda’s „Simplicity“. project by Georg Reil and Kathy Scheuring, January 2010 University of Applied Sciences Würzburg-Schweinfurt built with processing and arduino thanks to: Prof.
Dianne Harris at the Kinetica Art Fair 2011 *rugenius in design , 15:35 Armed with her camera, Justine checked out the Kinetica Art Fair for us, and found some inspiring and fun art pieces i’m loving! Here’s what she had to say about it… I discovered the work of Dianne Harris at the 2011 Kinetica Art Fair, where her Neon works Caduceus, E=MConsciousness2 and Eternally Yours were featured. Photo by Alex Robertson, courtesy Kinetica Art Fair Tags: art - events - lighting Xipe Tótec « NAIT5