Praised for bringing a more modern approach into American design and promoting a unification between art and technology in Bauhaus.
All in art
Praised for bringing a more modern approach into American design and promoting a unification between art and technology in Bauhaus.
Marie Lund’s work offers a physicality that goes beyond the initial aesthetic appeal of her use of materials. The strong physical presence of her art objects dominates the space with an air of austere corporealness and palpability.
The tangibility of Rudolf Stingel’s work is evident upon first glance with its indents and varied concave and convex patterned surfaces. It brings to question the definition of a painting and illuminates its process of creation.
The curves and angles in Tullio Crali’s paintings evoke a sense of height, excitement and dizziness, parallel to that of flying in a military plane. His works break down normative perspectives with shifting proportions and movement.
Rejector of any impression of a narrative surrounding his art, Jules Olitski left all to color. A fore-front in the color field school, Olitski’s work expresses an almost natural process of creation with pigment gradients that have an ethereal effect.
Adrian Paci was born in Albania in 1969, but fled to Italy with his family after the extreme riots in Albania in 1997. Paci’s socially-charged works include a variety of mediums ranging from photography and painting to videos and installations.
Visual artist, Leigh Wells, creates collages, drawings, and three-dimensional constructions that explore the mysterious boundaries between the truth and the unknowable.
Geerten Verheus’ sculptural installations, collages and paintings mostly function not through any narrative content.
Lodewijk Germanes,an 18 year-old visual artist from Belgium, currently studying graphic design at LUCA School of Arts in Brussels. In his recent work he would like to invite the viewer into his personal world of playful abstraction.
Katharina Marszewski (born 1980) lives and works in Berlin. She is a graduate of the Fine Art department at the College of Fine Arts, Braunschweig and is currently completing a PhD in Art in Context at the University of Arts, Berlin.
After the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010, she would wake up disheartened for the next 86 mornings, knowing that the oil was still flooding into the Gulf of Mexico.
She started to paint when she was 17. She didn't choose to draw women and bodies, it happened naturally, where she was in her life at that point she used the sketching and drawing to quiet her mind, and probably express the feelings and thoughts she couldn't express verbally or physically.
Anton Walker, 24 years old from St. Petersburg, Russia. By education he’s a graphic designer, but it's more his job.
Ryan Squire is a freelance illustrator, collage and mixed media creative currently based in Reading, UK.
Mind and intuition are both involved in the process, which has no pre-established ending.
Thomas Hammer is a New York City based visual artist. He builds his paintings up through layers of freehand brushstrokes, airbrush work, and simple trompe l'oeil effects.
The Lisson Gallery in Milan has a reputation for exhibiting pioneering artists. James Casebere is the next in a long line of reputable image-makers whose work has been shown at the Lisson.
Richard Devereux’s work makes no reference to the outside world it is both narrative-free and self-sufficient, consequently, a meditative quality emerges offering visual experiences that are both nourishing and contemplative.
Through the installations and editions he makes, Alex Chevalier is questioning the relation of the artist to his everyday life and his position in the contemporary society.
Pia Brix-Thomsen is neither particularly Nordic by looks nor in her art. She is like a gipsy, a citizen of the world, who with great passion becomes absorbed and paints vigorous sonorous canvases.