Sunday, 9 December 2012

Michael Grab







Land artist Michael Grab creates astonishing towers and orbs of balanced rocks using little more than patience and an astonishing sense of balance. Grab says the art of stone balancing has been practiced by various cultures around the world for centuries and that he personally finds the process of balancing to be meditative.
 For me balancing these stones look more than art to me, it was as if its a complete skill and acquire so much of patience...its so inspiring for me, its more like meditating ur self





Monday, 5 November 2012

Baptiste Debombourg AÉRIAL








Aerial is a new site-specific installation by Baptiste Debombourg at an old Benedictine monastery called Brauweiler Abbey near Cologne, Germany. Debombourg used numerous sheets of shattered laminate glass to mimic a frothy flood of water rushing into a room. Remarkably beautiful work.

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Sarah Frost works

Sarah Frost was born in Detroit and grew up in Rochester, NY. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting from Washington University in St. Louis and a Master of Fine Arts degree in sculpture from Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville. Frost’s work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions regionally, and she has her first show in New York in 2010. She has also received numerous awards and grants, including the inaugural Riverfront Times’ Visual Arts Mastermind award in 2008 and grants from Arts in Transit and the Missouri Arts Council.  Most recently she won the Great Rivers Biennial 2010, a grant funded by the Gateway Foundation and solo exhibition at Contemporary Art Museum Saint Louis. She currently lives and works in St. Louis.




Sarah uses thousands of keys from discarded keyboards and compile all together to make abstract and images. Also the thing i liked about this particular work was that these installations are almost a physical form of Sudoku puzzles..Well i am not really sure if the artist had thinked or designed it in this particular fashion...But for me i couldn't resist to image standing in front of these works and try to make words out of these works...

Artist Bio taken from
http://www.sarahfrost.info

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Brian Mock Animals


Portland, Oregon based sculptor, Brian Mock, creates elegantly crafted recycled metal sculptures. He welds materials like wing nuts, hinges, screws, nails, found sheet metal, car rotors, and more to create a variety of sculptural forms from figurative, to animal, to decorative, and functional. In out times scrap is always taken as a an object of no use, but Brian gives scrap a new life...

In his own words:
"I am intrigued by the challenge of creating an entirely unique piece from an eclectic collection of discarded objects. Giving these old, common items a new and extraordinary life as one sculpture is an artistically challenging yet gratifying process. This type of work is also designed to be highly interactive and prompt viewers to question the reality of what they see. Audience reactions fuel my motivation." 








I only select objects that have been used and discarded. My goal is for each object to transcend its origin by being integrated into an animal/ organic forms that are alive and in motion. This process of reclamation and regeneration is liberating to me as an artist.
Building these sculptures helps me understand the situations that surround me. It reminds me that even if there is a conflict right now, there is also a solution in which all the pieces can coexist peacefully. Though there are wide gaps in some areas and small holes in others, when seen from the distance there is great beauty and harmony in our community. Through my sculptures I transmit a message of hope.

Interview of him taken from
http://www.360seegallery.com/artists/brian-mock.html?p=2

Sunday, 7 October 2012

Kumi Yamashita





Constellation is an ongoing series of portraits by New York artist Kumi Yamashita known most prominently for her innovative light and shadow sculptures which i  liked for my blog. Each image is constructed from a single unbroken black thread wound through a dense array of galvanized nails mounted on a painted white board, meaning that the darker areas within the portrait are formed solely from the density of the string. I am no stranger to artworks created with thread and nails, but these are certainly some of the most impressive and intricate works I’ve ever seen made using this method.

Sunday, 30 September 2012

continue to Shawn Clover works

We as an artist today only read and look up to the images from the history and sometimes make artworks that narrate history in a way that it becomes more easier for the viewer to actually imagine what was happening around at that time, what were the conditions that surrounds people at that time....we the artists learn this technique from history itself..creating the history, by creating what is happening around us... This is what is being happening since the caves, the Egyptian times, the Romans, the West, and so and so.
In our times still artist narrate history in a very cleashe way by doing it the way it had been done again and again...
These images that use a very basic technique of cloning in Photoshop, but the way the artist has done is very creative manner.He merges old photographs from 1905 and merge them into photographs of current time, This makes the viewer to actually thing what was actually happening way back in that time. Because the very recent history told to us by our ansistors is that one we could imagine but could not actually live in those moments ..Here the artist make it so believable like its happening now...
I somehow connect it to our own religion of sub-continent, when the partition happened back in 1947, and when i  saw these photos, stories came up striking my mind that my grand mother use to tell me while i was a child, and i uses to imagine what was happening at that time.
I really admire the artist to use such a basic digital medium to create these amazing pieces that helps us connect to our past and pay respect to what we have now...
     



Tuesday, 25 September 2012


 Shawn clover created composite photographs that blend historical scenes from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and his own present-day captures of the same locations.