The post Mesmerizing Art Created From Dandelion Fluffs appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>She calls herself Euglena, by the name of a microorganism living in freshwater. She is an installation artist based in Tokyo, where she studied at Tama Art University and Tokyo University of Arts. Her signature projects are interactive installations in which dandelion puffs substitute the use of an artificial driving force to animate the work.
During the last few years, her works were exhibited in many galleries throughout Japan to a great reception, and we have to admit that these tiny sculptures look truly amazing. The installations are so gentle and cute and some of them resemble a dancer in movement, so thin and light.
The artist posts her works online, where a small community of 1,000+ followers admires her works. Still, it’s so hard to believe that it’s possible to make tridimensional sculptures out of something so fragile like dandelion’s fluffs.
See it for yourself in the gallery below!
The post Mesmerizing Art Created From Dandelion Fluffs appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Meet Dive Madhouse, the Parisian Who’s Conquering the Art World appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>According to his personal website, the artist “lets his very raw, naked and intense expression pass in color, on canvas.” And in his work, he uses raw brushes, painting knives, spray cans, and his bare hands.
“Mediums, being merely a tool for the channeled emotion, vary between acrylics, oils, spray paint, oil pastels, and water,” the website reads. “Whatever suits the desired effect and technique of the moment.”
The artist has already exhibited in big cities all over the world, like New York, Venice, China, Gothenburg, and London.
He has attracted an audience of over 73.1 thousand Instagram followers, and according to his website, he is the biggest artist in Sweden with such a huge following.
Scroll down and take a look at his masterpieces below.
The post Meet Dive Madhouse, the Parisian Who’s Conquering the Art World appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Mesmerizing Art Created From Dandelion Fluffs appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>She calls herself Euglena, by the name of a microorganism living in freshwater. She is an installation artist based in Tokyo, where she studied at Tama Art University and Tokyo University of Arts. Her signature projects are interactive installations in which dandelion puffs substitute the use of an artificial driving force to animate the work.
During the last few years, her works were exhibited in many galleries throughout Japan to a great reception, and we have to admit that these tiny sculptures look truly amazing. The installations are so gentle and cute and some of them resemble a dancer in movement, so thin and light.
The artist posts her works online, where a small community of 1,000+ followers admires her works. Still, it’s so hard to believe that it’s possible to make tridimensional sculptures out of something so fragile like dandelion’s fluffs.
See it for yourself in the gallery below!
The post Mesmerizing Art Created From Dandelion Fluffs appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Meet Dive Madhouse, the Parisian Who’s Conquering the Art World appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>According to his personal website, the artist “lets his very raw, naked and intense expression pass in color, on canvas.” And in his work, he uses raw brushes, painting knives, spray cans, and his bare hands.
“Mediums, being merely a tool for the channeled emotion, vary between acrylics, oils, spray paint, oil pastels, and water,” the website reads. “Whatever suits the desired effect and technique of the moment.”
The artist has already exhibited in big cities all over the world, like New York, Venice, China, Gothenburg, and London.
He has attracted an audience of over 73.1 thousand Instagram followers, and according to his website, he is the biggest artist in Sweden with such a huge following.
Scroll down and take a look at his masterpieces below.
The post Meet Dive Madhouse, the Parisian Who’s Conquering the Art World appeared first on TettyBetty.
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