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2011 Nikon Small World in Motion - 1st Place. Home :: Dan Hillier. Anne Novado Cappuccilli. 1967 born in New York, United States Lives and works in Syracuse, New York, United States Education 2004 Master of Fine Art, Painting; Syracuse University Grants 2005 Faculty Development Travel Grant; Syracuse University Solo Exhibitions 2011 Exhibit A Gallery, Corning, NY 2010 New England College, Henniker, NH 2009 Fenton Art Gallery, Onondaga Community College Edgewood Gallery, DeWitt, NY 2008 Cedar Art Gallery, Houghton Art Center, Corning, NY 2004 Taskale Gallery; Syracuse, NY, "Paintings and Stain Drawings" Group Exhibitions 2011 Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, NY, "Finger Lakes Juried Exhibition" 2010 Launch Pad, Brooklyn NY, "Price Check" Exhibit A Gallery, Corning, NY, "Black and White" XL Projects, Syracuse, NY, Stone Canoe Exhibition 2009 George Segal Gallery, Montclair, NJ, (Juried) South Shore Arts Center, Cohassett, MA,(Juried) 2008 Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, Biennial (Juried) 2006 Sikkema Jenkins & Co., NY NY, "Postcards from the Edge" Projects Collections (Private) Bibliography.

Google Image Slideshow - Online Slideshows from Search Results. Codex Seraphinianus. Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera. Divenuto un libro di culto, un'enciclopedia surreale, è stato ed è molto apprezzato da personalità come Italo Calvino, Federico Zeri, Giorgio Manganelli, Achille Bonito Oliva, Tim Burton, Douglas Hofstadter e Philippe Découflé. Il Codex è una reinterpretazione in chiave fantastica e visionaria di materie quali la zoologia, la botanica, la mineralogia, l'etnografia, la fisica, la tecnologia, l'architettura ecc. e da alcuni è stata accostata al manoscritto Voynich, al racconto Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius di Jorge Luis Borges o a Flatlandia di Edwin Abbott Abbott[senza fonte].

Edizioni[modifica | modifica sorgente] Voci correlate[modifica | modifica sorgente] Manoscritto Voynich Note[modifica | modifica sorgente] ^ vedi Decodex, abbinato in appendice alla edizione Rizzoli del dicembre 2006:[1] Collegamenti esterni[modifica | modifica sorgente] Bart Hess > Design Academy Eindhoven. Stefanie Posavec “On the Map” *notcot in design , 23:52 NOTCOT Note: Here is another post continuing on Justine’s (aka RUGenius’) adventures in Sheffield, it took a bit of researching, but she’s come back to me with some MIND BLOWING infographics from Stephanie Posavec, you definitely need to click on the images after the jump to see them in full resolution where you can see what every curve and color represents. I kid you not, you will not see Kerouac’s On The Road the same again… During my recent trip up to Sheffield, I was fortunate enough to be staying next door to the Millennium Galleries, who hosted a portion of the citywide Art Sheffield event.

Among the exhibits, was one called “On the Map” (more info here as well), which uses craft and design to understand the symbolic and representative nature of maps. Works included a dress made of maps, numerous old maps of London, a gorgeous Kerr | Noble representation of the River Thames through graphic design and the words of the John Banck’s Description of London. Www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2011/talktome/checklist.pdf. Giles Walker: Animated Sculptures « 13 Feb Click to enlarge For over the past twenty years English sculptor Giles Walker has been working with robots, creating kinetic sculptures from materials found in scrap yards. A member of the guerilla-art group The Mutoid Waste Company, Walker’s robots are a creative intervention into our throw-away capitalist culture as well as a commentary on the surveillance practices or our time.

All of these pieces are just great, but the DJ and Pole Dancers’ Peepshow with their surveillance-camera heads, in addition to excellent hip and pelvic movements, might be my favorites. Walker’s robots have been exhibited all over the world, most recently this past week at the RAW Art Fair, part of the Rotterdam Art Fair 2012. Photos courtesy of the artist; LookforArt; Epicfu; maggie jones’ flickr; and de_buurman’s flickr. Arjen Born: Photographs from the Future « 17 Feb Click to enlarge Recently, I’ve mentioned to my future-industrial-designer-daughter Daniela that I believe there will be a great demand for smartly designed, affordable gear for the elderly in the not-so-distant future, with everyone living longer and the price of healthcare increasing while insurance coverage declines.

Clearly, Dutch photographer Arjen Born feels the same way. These photographs are at once comical and moving. Via gup magazine. Do Ho Suh: Floor plus Cause & Effect « 21 Feb Click to enlarge I’ve recently become acquainted with Korean artist Do Ho Suh’s work, both online and in person this past fall at Lehmann Maupin Gallery’s exhibit of his work. However, these two installations are new to me and both appeal to me very much. Floor, which was recently exhibited at the Singapore Tyler Print Institute, consists of almost 2,000 plastic little men pushing up on a walkable glass surface, trying to prevent being crushed.

Cause & Effect is currently on display at Western Washington University. Photos: Phaidon, Huffington Post, The Stranger, and Korea.net’s flickr via colossal. Olga Diego: Interactive Inflatables « 24 Feb We certainly have posted our fair share of inflatable sculptures and installations, but somehow each one has its own personality and style. This exhibit, Aire (Air), a few months back at the Mustang Art Gallery, is an installation by Spanish artist Olga Diego. Working with plastic, both translucent and transparent, and plastic bags, along with electronic circuits that inflated and deflated each structure, Diego filled the gallery with six separate inflatable works that interact with each other and with those who viewed the show in its space. Some of the pieces allude to well-known images such as Duchamp’s The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors, Even, and the hanging man to Christ.

Some of her shapes are organic in form and complement the more figurative ones nicely. The two bottom photos are from a previous exhibit by Olga Diego at Plataforma Petracos, Hábitos de Habitar (Habits of Inhabiting). Photos by Álvaro Vicente and El Periodic. Olga Diego - Aire. 16_leebul.jpg (1080×720)