Review by Jas Bhachu I had the pleasure of chatting with the HARU stuck-on-design team during London Design Festival. HARU stuck-on design is an exciting new concept from Japan, making it so easy to bring colour to interiors - and to create great art and design. It's an adhesive tape that sticks to all kinds of surfaces, to furniture, to walls and floors - even to skateboards. And its special technology means it can easily be peeled off without a trace. HARU stuck-on design was developed by Nitto, a company established in Japan in 1918, with a long history in specialist electrical insulation materials and adhesive tape-related products. For 100 years they have created solutions and materials for all kinds of scientific, medical, industrial and automotive environments. Now they're using their technological skills to create their own range of products, designed to be truly life enhancing, rooted in innovation and creativity. Already a Red Dot Design Award winner, it's as ideal for sophisticated architectural projects as it is for inspirational interior designers, as exciting for parents as it is for graffiti artists. Using HARU stuck-on design, you'll be exploring the best of your creative talents. HARU stuck-on design comes in a host of different combinations. There are 8 colour families, different patterns (some traditional, some graphic, some transparent), different kinds of materials (some tougher for floor use), and 4 different widths.
To find out more and to keep in touch with HARU stuck-on design, follow @harustuckondesign on Instagram.
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Article: Christopher George
Henry Miller Fine Art presents the first-ever UK retrospective of Michael Leonard’s work, including drawings and paintings from the 1960’s to the 2000's. Spanning five decades, this is Leonard's first London exhibition in 15 years and will features rarely seen examples of his commercial work alongside portraits, nudes and still lifes. In the show will be some of Leonard’s most iconic works including “Changing” (1981) and “Passage of Arms” (1979) from the “scaffolders series” as well as his Thatcher cover for The Sunday Times Magazine (1980) and several still lives and line drawings, showcasing the range and versatility of one of Britain’s most talented artists. Henry Miller Fine Art Etro will collaborate with French artist Patrick Tresset with an exhibition of robotic installations, titled “Absent Minded”, during the London Frieze Art Fair.
The Etro boutique on Old Bond Street will host Tresset’s two performative installations which use robots as actors. The robots, representing stylised minimal artists, are only capable of drawing obsessively. Their bodies are old school desks on which the drawing paper is pinned. A left arm, bolted on the table, a mechanised camera looks alternatively at the drawing in progress and at the subject. In one of the installations, guests are invited to take part, acting as models during a 30 min performance. As a subject, they will be studied and sketched by the 3 robots. In the other installation, a single robot will constantly draw elements of a still life. The installations, together with a selection of Patrick Tresset’s work, will be exhibited in Etro’s London boutique from 4th October for two weeks. Visit the Etro Boutique at 43 Old Bond Street, London Article: Christopher George Giacomo Brunelli's New York series belongs to a long and rich photographic tradition of celebrated photographers (William Klein, Paul Strand, Berenice Abbott) who brought a new visual intensity and originality to photographing the city. New York is the result of Brunelli's constant walking, often for ten hours a day, chancing upon particular things that sparked his interest be that the shape of a hat, a piece of clothing or demeanour of a person. Adopting the position of voyeur or spy, he follows his prey until he alights on the right time to create the image. Brunelli's aesthetic is personal, inspired by a film-noir sense of disquietude. By pushing the lens to the closest point of focus, almost touching the subject, he suggests a very close intimacy with these strangers, whilst at the same time respecting their anonymity. Brunelli shoots and processes in a classical style of photography that has become rare in recent times, photographing with a 1962 Miranda and printing in his darkroom.
Such texture has been crated with Brunelli's distant voyeuristic and graphic black and white images - Bringing back to life a New York photographic art and style. Giacomo Brunelli Review: Christopher George
Before becoming the critically acclaimed filmmaker responsible for such iconic films as Dr. Strangelove and The Shining, Stanley Kubrick spent five years as a photographer for Look magazine. The Bronx native joined the staff in 1945, when he was only 17 years old, and shot humanist slice-of-life features that celebrate and expose New York City and its inhabitants. Through a Different Lens reveals the keen and evocative vision of a burgeoning creative genius in a range of feature stories and images, from everyday folk at the laundromat to a day in the life of a debutant, from a trip to the circus to Columbia University. Featuring around 300 images, many previously unseen, as well as rare Look magazine tear sheets, this release coincides with a major show at the Museum of the City of New York and includes an introduction by noted photography critic Luc Sante. These still photographs attest to Kubrick’s innate talent for compelling storytelling, and serve as clear indicators of how this genius would soon transition to making some of the greatest movies of all time. Stanley Kubrick Photographs. Through a Different Lens |
sø•artyCreative minds produce in all mediums. Displaying some of the finest art items edited to suit a refined self and lifestyle Archives
April 2024
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