If I was curator
This blog is a representation and reflection of artist I would have if I was a curator.
martes, 24 de noviembre de 2015
domingo, 6 de julio de 2014
martes, 5 de noviembre de 2013
Adrian Villa Rojas
Adrian Villa Rojas
I was lucky enough to go and see his last exhibition at the serpentine gallery, it has been a great inspiration. Inside of the space I would feel 'home', which is a very hard sensation to get in the middle of London, where it seems time never stops. In this exhibition it was not only about the pieces that where shown, but the atmosphere he was able to create through the cracking grey clay and the brick wall, which was not attached with concrete and would make a rattling, although pleasant noise.
Here is an interview of him about the serpentine gallery exhibition:
miércoles, 30 de octubre de 2013
lunes, 28 de octubre de 2013
domingo, 27 de octubre de 2013
Pauline Saglio
Pauline Saglio
RewindRewind is a digital clock collection designed to revive a physical link with the reading of the time that has become pervasive and unconscious since the digital revolution. While the movements relative to the reading of time are now gone, each clock offers a unique way to rewind its mechanism. When nowadays the gesture of interaction is minimized to touch, they propose to give it a more physical dimension by playing with recharge or energy release and either to rewind the clock to display the time, or to go back in time with the nostalgia evoked by the type of interaction. Their codes, drawing on childhood memories, transform what was once seen as a task into a fun activity.
you may see the video on the link below. It's amazing.
http://vimeo.com/74715354
lunes, 21 de octubre de 2013
Lyonel Feininger
Lyonel Feininger
I was lucky to discover this artist at the Bauhaus, looking in between books. When looking through the process of his work, I did find interesting his paintings, but what made the connection to his art was the special way he used the Bahaus space with light, and transmitting it through photography.
Many know Lyonel Feininger as an accomplished painter, printmaker, and caricaturist whose work is forever linked to the Bauhaus movement. He was Walter Gropius’s first faculty appointment to the Weimar art school in 1919, and he helped shape an artistic movement that would influence artists for decades to come.
Lyonel’s early work includes moody nighttime shots of the Bauhaus building and the surrounding area. His photographs were not publicly exhibited because of the objections of his wife, who encouraged him to promote his career as a painter instead.
What made his work so special for me was the simplicity of the combination of the light and architecture.
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