Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Exquisite Paper Fish and Birds by Lisa Lloyd Twist in Elegant Motion

one pink and one navy fighting fish appear suspended in a circular formation

“Flux.” All images © Lisa Lloyd, shared with permission

An elegant, energetic menagerie continues to emerge from Lisa Lloyd’s Brighton studio. Known for her painstaking precision and deft layering process, the artist (previously) imbues her paper sculptures with an immense amount of life, each creature conveying movement and vigor.

One of Lloyd’s most recent works, “Flux,” centers on a pair of fighting fish with gracefully swishing fins. Made in collaboration with the printer Barnard & Westwood, the bettas sport tiny speckles and stripes on their scales as their bodies curve toward each other. Additional sculptures include the anatomical “Ovule,” which depicts a bird severed to reveal a gold spine and flower in its torso, and her recent Rise series of avian-like forms with long, sweeping tails.

Many of the works shown here will be on view through October 15 at StART Art Fair at Saatchi Gallery in London. Lloyd also generously shares insights into her process on Instagram.

 

a close up image of a navy fish with elegant swishing fins

Detail of “Flux”

a close up of striped and dotted fins

Detail of “Flux”

a flying bird sculpture made of navy and gold paper

“Ovule”

two bird like forms in bright colored paper appear to swish toward the center

“Rise 01”

two bird like forms in bright colored paper appear to swish toward the center

“Rise 03”

two bird like forms in bright blue and gold colored paper appear to swish toward the center

“Rise 02”

a hand uses a tweezers to apply scales to a navy paper fish

The artist works on “Flux”

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Disjointed and Mirrored Figures Break Into Indistinct Selves in Kat Kristof’s Portraits

a portrait of a woman with a similar figure appearing to peel off from her front

“She & Her” (2023), oil on canvas, 150 x 150 centimeters. All images courtesy of BEERS London, shared with permission

“Where is the outline of one’s self beyond the physical body?” asks the artist Kat Kristof. “If I stand close to you, am I part of you? If we touch, our beings intersect, where do I start and do you begin? Do we share a single being between us?”

In Her & the Self opening next week at BEERS London, Kristof expounds on what it means to try to define something as mutable, fluid, and fragmented as the self. She paints in neutrals and muted jewel tones, rendering figures that are disjointed, mirrored, entwined, and glitched. In works like “She & Her,” for example, a secondary figure appears to peel itself off the body of the subject, a motif similar to that in “Portrait of Them IV.” Other pieces, like “Portrait of Her IV,” show a single woman looking directly toward the viewer, while another identical form slyly peeks out from her left side with a knowing expression.

A statement about the exhibition poses the theory that each portrait equally depicts the sitter and the artist, further ensnaring several identities and perceptions into each of Kristof’s works. While composed of geometric blocks of subtle color, her stylized figures defy clear delineation, their forms often melding into one another and blurring any boundary between the two. The subjects also retain their anonymity and distance from the viewer, further questioning the limits of what we’re able to glean about each other and ourselves.

Her & the Self runs from October 20 to November 25. Glimpse Kristof’s studio and process on Instagram.

 

A mirrored portrait of a woman split in the center

“Portrait of Her I” (2023), oil on canvas, 135 x 145 centimeters

A portrait of a woman wearing blue with a second figure appearing to emerge from her left side

“Portrait of Her IV” (2023), oil on canvas, 100 x 100 centimeters

A portrait of a person with their back turned to the same figure. Fragments of that figure are also flipped and mirrored vertically

“Portrait of Them II” (2023), oil on canvas, 150 x 150 centimeters

Two figures with geometric faces, both touching heads

“Portrait of Them IV” (2023), oil on canvas, 145 x 110 centimeters

A portrait of two women wearing white, one leans her head on the others' shoulder

“Her & Her” (2023), oil on canvas, 185 x 125 centimeters

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Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Barriers Made of Concrete and Oyster Shells Mitigate Erosion and Offer Alluring New Habitats on Australia’s Coastline

an aerial view of a snorkeler swimming among organically shaped structures

All images © Alex Goad/Reef Design Lab, shared with permission

Stretching across more than 160 miles of Victoria’s central coast, Port Phillip harbors a diverse marine ecosystem. In recent years, though, the Australian bay has experienced widespread development that’s damaged the vegetation protecting the land, leading to mass erosion and habitat destruction. At this rate, some of the current shoreline is predicted to be entirely underwater by 2100.

As a remedy, designer Alex Goad and the team at the Melbourne-based Reef Design Lab have created a series of conical modules that break waves and re-establish healthy ecosystems for aquatic life. Titled Erosion Mitigation Units and installed near the city of Greater Geelong, the two-meter-wide structures are made of concrete and recycled oyster shells layered into molds. Once removed and submerged in the water, the undulating, organic shapes offer small caves, tunnels, and hiding spaces for shellfish, octopus, sponges, coral, and other creatures. Overhangs provide resting spots for stingrays and globefish, and one-centimeter-wide ridges on the surface are designed to attract tube worms, mussels, and oysters. “After six months of being submerged, the modules have already been colonised by several shellfish species, sponges, and cold water corals and are visited by stingrays and local snorkelers,” Goad shares.

Both a buoy to conservation efforts and an alluring addition to the waters, the units serve several purposes, Goad says, explaining further:

Not only does creating more complex geometry lead to better wave attenuation and habitat for marine life, but creating a softer sculptural aesthetic for these types of structures is essentially like underwater gardening. Just like how we design our landscapes and public parks, I think the same sort of effort and respect should be paid when building in the marine environment. I wanted the installation to be enjoyed in a similar way to a public park, but instead of walking, you can swim through the undulating forms, each with its own ecosystem developing. Over time, the installation will be completely overgrown, and the sculptural forms won’t be noticeable, but I think that is part of the magic of the project.

Dezeen recently longlisted the Erosion Migration Units for the sustainability category of its annual design awards, and the lab’s MARS project, comprised of modular structures to restore coral reefs, will be on view at National Gallery Victoria in the coming weeks. The team is also working on several new designs at the moment and collaborating on the U.S. government’s Reefense project. Find more from Reef Design Lab on its site and Instagram.

 

one of the concrete units is lowered in to the water

the view of the units partially submerged in the water

a snorkeler swims among the submerged units

fish congregate around a submerged unit

a starfish clings to the side of a colonized module

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Barriers Made of Concrete and Oyster Shells Mitigate Erosion and Offer Alluring New Habitats on Australia’s Coastline appeared first on Colossal.



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Shot From the Cockpit of a Boeing 767, Santiago Borja’s Photographs Capture Stunning Storms Around the World

A storm cloud taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

All images © Santiago Borja, shared with permission

Illuminated by lightning or the setting sun, Santiago Borja’s dramatic photographs (previously) capture storms from a unique perspective: right beside them at eye level. As a Boeing 767 pilot, he observes stunning meteorological phenomena on his travels around the globe, spotting towering cumulonimbus clouds and powerful lightning strikes. “As long as we learn about nature and never underestimate its power, we can safely navigate through its features while enjoying the views,” he says.

Prints of some of Borja’s images are available to purchase on his website, and you can follow his ongoing travels and storm sightings on Instagram.

 

A storm cloud taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

A storm cloud and lightning taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

A storm cloud taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

A storm cloud taken from the cockpit of an airplane.  A storm cloud and lightning taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

A storm cloud taken from the cockpit of an airplane.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Shot From the Cockpit of a Boeing 767, Santiago Borja’s Photographs Capture Stunning Storms Around the World appeared first on Colossal.



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Ikebana Connects Creative Traditions in ‘Common Ground,’ a Ceramic Project Tying People Together Through Earthen Materials

a small ceramic pot with a sprawling floral arrangement shot against a blue backdrop

“Massachusetts.” Photo by Joshua White. All images courtesy of Inventory Press, shared with permission

“Before there was America the country, or the individual states and the ensuing territorial identities and resulting politics, there was the land that America occupies,” writes artist Adam Silverman about Common Ground. Born in 2019, the ongoing project is ambitious and optimistic, seeking to connect people separated by ideology, geography, and culture through the shared land we occupy.

While its goal is lofty, the premise of Common Ground is simple: Silverman harvests clay, water, and wood ash from all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and the five occupied U.S. territories—Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and Northern Mariana Islands—and then blends the materials together so that the substances and their origins are indistinguishable. That mixture is the basis of the artist’s ceramic vessels, which encompass two series of tableware and ceremonial pots. He explains about the latter: “The forms are not subtle, and although they stand on strong feet or foundations, they are battered, scarred, leaning over, showing the processes that got them here. The tops are open, symbolically ready to receive.”

A new book published by Inventory Press celebrates Silverman’s ceremonial pots, which are paired with sweeping arrangements made by ikebana students and teachers. Common Ground: With Sogetsu Ikebana Los Angeles documents the artist’s process and explores the impulse behind the project, particularly as it bridges American and Japanese making traditions. Spreads are full of diagrams explaining differences in materials, images of Silverman collecting and preparing his substances, and photos of the completed collaborative works that show myriad Ikebana creations emerging from the vessels.

Common Ground: With Sogetsu Ikebana Los Angeles is currently available from Bookshop, and you can explore more of the project on its site.

 

a small ceramic pot with a sprawling floral arrangement shot against a blue backdrop

“Maryland.” Photo by Joshua White

a small ceramic pot with a sprawling floral arrangement shot against a blue backdrop

“Pennsylvania.” Photo by Joshua White

An open book spread showing ceramic vessel with botanicals growing from them in a gallery

a small ceramic pot with a sprawling floral arrangement shot against a blue backdrop

“Louisianna.” Photo by Joshua White

An open book spread with "Common Ground Materials" at the top of the page and small images of materials and text descriptions

a small ceramic pot with a sprawling floral arrangement shot against a blue backdrop

“West Virginia.” Photo by Joshua White

the cover the book common ground with a collection of ceramic vessels on the cover

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Cranbrook Academy of Art Announces Public Lecture Series With Artists, Architects, Curators, and Designers

six portraits

Clockwise from upper left: Ghada Amer, Norman Teague, Risa Puleo, Roberto Lugo, Cannupa Hanska Luger (Photo by Reece Martinez), Yolande Daniels (Photo by Priscilla Mars)

The 2023–2024 public lecture series at Cranbrook Academy of Art brings together an innovative group of artists, architects, curators, and designers to address some of the most urgent issues of our time through performance, object making, curation, and critical writing. Together, they encourage us to think expansively about the role of creativity in building community and in shaping the world around us. Each speaker will spend several days on Cranbrook’s campus in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, conducting studio visits and sharing insights into their creative practice. 

The visiting artists include:

  • October 19, 2023, 6 p.m.
    Risa Puleo, Independent Curator
  • November 9, 2023, 6 p.m.
    Norman Teague, Designer and Educator
  • November 30, 2023, 6 p.m.
    Hamza Walker, Director of LAXART
  • December 14, 2023, 6 p.m.
    Cannupa Hanska Luger, Multidisciplinary Artist
  • January 11, 2024, 6 p.m.
    Yolande Daniels, Associate Professor in Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and co-founder of studioSUMO 
  • February 1, 2024, 6 p.m.
    Ghada Amer, Artist
  • February 22, 2024, 6 p.m.
    Andrianna Campbell-LaFleur, Art Critic, Curator, and Historian
  • March 21, 2024, 6 p.m.
    Yuri Suzuki, Sound Artist, Designer, Electronic Musician
  • April 4, 2024, 6 p.m.
    Roberto Lugo, Artist, Social Activist, Poet, and Educator

All lectures are free and held at Cranbrook Art Museum. Recorded lectures will be available on the Cranbrook Academy of Art deSalle Auditorium YouTube channel. The lecture series is supported by the Gilbert Family Foundation.

Cranbrook Academy of Art is a dynamic community of architects, artists, and designers working together to shape the future of visual art and material culture. Ranked as one of the country’s top graduate-only programs in art, architecture, and design, Cranbrook is a place for students looking to earn their MFA or MArch within a program free from conventional classes and a fixed curriculum. Instead, we offer an unscripted approach to graduate education that centers the questions and interests of artists who choose to study here. The 11 disciplines of study include 2D Design, 3D Design, 4D Design, Architecture, Ceramics, Fiber, Metalsmithing, Painting, Photography, Print Media, and Sculpture.

Applications are now open through February 1, 2024.

Nearly 80 percent of Cranbrook Academy students receive financial aid in the form of gifts and scholarships to assist with the cost of study. This includes up to ten full-tuition Gilbert Fellowships for students from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, intended to provide resources and pathways to increase equity within graduate education. 

To learn more, visit cranbrookart.edu.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Cranbrook Academy of Art Announces Public Lecture Series With Artists, Architects, Curators, and Designers appeared first on Colossal.



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Saturday, October 7, 2023

Circular Drone Paths Nestle into Craggy Grooves and Valleys in Reuben Wu’s Unearthly Photos

a circular light floats amid a rocky cavern

All images © Reuben Wu, shared with permission

Peeking out from rocky gorges, flowing through a thin crack in the terrain, and elegantly sweeping upward among layers of stone, Reuben Wu’s drone paths conjure the uncanny. The Chicago-based photographer (previously) has been working with light painting for about a decade, transforming nighttime scenes into strange, otherworldly vistas. His latest project, The Inner Landscape, continues this tradition as it positions small, orb-like geometries among craggy formations.

Commissioned by Apple and captured on an iPhone, the series departs from Wu’s earlier projects like Lux Noctis in that the photos frame smaller spaces. He writes on Instagram:

Many of the landforms I illuminated were very far away and massive. In a way, I was pushing the drone to fly as far as it could to create this seemingly impossible epic night scene…The Inner Landscape feels much more intimate, where I am closer, or in the midst of the subject matter. The scene feels almost like part of my own mind.

The juxtaposition of darkness and artificial lighting “intensifies this mood of unreality,” he says, and similarly contrasts the quiet intimacy of the spaces with the unfamiliarity of the compositions.

Find an extensive archive of Wu’s works on his site.

 

a streak of light curls above rocky towers

a circular light peeks out behind a rocky cavern

three orbs illuminate a green pocket of water amid rocks

a streak of blue light illuminates a rocky pass

a distant light flies in a rocky gorge

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Circular Drone Paths Nestle into Craggy Grooves and Valleys in Reuben Wu’s Unearthly Photos appeared first on Colossal.



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A Knotted Octopus Carved Directly into Two Pianos Entwines Maskull Lasserre’s New Musical Sculpture

“The Third Octave” (2023). All images © Maskull Lasserre, shared with permission Behind the hammers and pins of most upright pianos is a ...