Hiromi Tango

 

Using a rainbow of colorful textiles, Japanese-American artist Hiromi Tango creates sculptures and installations that she then interacts with. Her works are often collaborative, performative, and site-specific as a direct reaction to today’s virtual communication style. In recent years, Hiromi’s work has become more and more focused on neuroscientific concepts, posing questions around neuroplasticity, empathy, and epigenetics in her quest to effect healing and well-being through arts.

 

 

 

 

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Jonathan Knowles / Complex Simplicity

 

As a kid I was endlessly fascinated with the game Mousetrap, so being drawn to Jonathan Knowles‘ photographs of set designer Kyle Bean‘s Complex Simplicity project was a no-brainer. Each one is inspired by the Rube Golberg machine, originating from the man’s cartoon creations of complicated machines designed to complete simple tasks. Captured in a pastel palette with a modern treatment, Knowles created a clean and crisp lighting aesthetic across the project that allowed for a clarity of detail befitting the complex Rube Goldberg machine.

 

 

 

 

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Wrappu Gift Boxes

 

Sometime in the last decade or so, gift bags became the ultimate copout in gifting. Weird shape? Throw it in a bag! Don’t have a box? Throw it in a bag! Running short on time? Throw it in a bag! And while anything that makes life the tiniest bit easier is welcome, so is effort. Wrappu‘s gift boxes find the happy medium with a pretty palette and selection of patterns that work great together or apart and four box shapes to accommodate a number of shapes and sizes.

 

 

 

 

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5 Dishware Crushes

Helen Levi
Beach Series Traditional Mug // Ocean Dinner Plate // Pebble Series Breakfast Bowl // Sunrise Dinner Plates

 

Stolen Form
Brick Dish // Pipe Espresso / Condiment Cups // Tin Can Mug // Salt & Pepper Pipes

 

Kaz
Aqua Speckle Bowl // Marble Cheese Platter // Watercolour Moon Platter // Tia Bowl Set

 

Robert Gordon
Canvas Dinner Plate // Coffee Run Mug Set // Pearl Mug // Merchant Charcoal Bowl

 

Fenek
Big Salad Bowl // Blue Splattered Espresso Cups // High Plate // Splattered Mug

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Derrick Velasquez

 

I’m crazy about the work of Derrick Velasquez! Layers upon layers upon layers of interest.

My most recent work deals with forces projected onto manufactured and industrially engineered materials. Some of these forces are natural, such as an accumulated weight created by gravity, and some are more forced like tension applied by testing an object’s flexibility to its breaking point. The demands put on these materials reveal and obscure structures of both their intended consumer use and the qualities of the material itself.  By the use of marine vinyl, masonite, handmade half-scale 2X4s, plywood, and found objects, I aim to question the way we physically interact with the tangible and manufactured structures of everyday life. Through an investigative manipulation that observes and skews nominal measurements, my work teases out our psychological relation to the dimensions and conditions given by such materials. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Kirsten Lilford

 

Cape Town-based Kirsten Lilford takes everyday photos of family outings, domestic scenes, and suburban landscapes and transforms them into paintings with uncanny and slightly sinister tones. Her work is definitely reminiscent of early 19th century realists, but with a unique style of her own.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Juan Osoro

 

If science textbook-meets-carnival sideshow subject matter is your jam, then you’ll be into Juan Osorno‘s style without question. His intricate pencil illustrations depict natural elements like plant life, outer space, and the human body, but partners them together in the most unexpected ways.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Rebecca Chitticks

 

These are some seriously flattering portraits! Rebecca Chitticks has a gift for painting away the imperfections that no one needs to see, while keeping the things that might be considered charming, like freckles. Each subject feels intimately familiar all while inviting the viewer to delve deeper.

 

 

 

 

 

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Jessica Waterman

 

Jessica Waterman‘s wood and textile pieces make me want to visit Labrador and Newfoundland immediately! From colorful row houses to nature’s wilderness, inspiration comes from the surrounding areas, woods and textiles chosen because they reflect the land’s character. There’s no denying the beauty of the carpentry and art creations coming out of Jessica’s studio where she combines her carpentry skills with a costume design degree.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Alejandra Atarés

 

Barcelona-based artist Alejandra Atarés paints gardens and portraits full of color and life. I like to imagine just what these women’s expressions are as they gaze at the brilliant landscapes of her creation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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