Material for Spring
I’m sure you’d have no difficulties growing into it, because if I ever know just one thing about you, it’s that you have the ability to make a home out of anything
I’m sure you’d have no difficulties growing into it, because if I ever know just one thing about you, it’s that you have the ability to make a home out of anything
Kevin Balboa reconnects with his early muses for this exhibition. He loved traveling when he was younger and did not mind the hassle caused by traffic and other stuff.
Human life is a limited period of time. Regardless of stories of second chances, coming back to life, or any claims of longevity, the simple fact is humans only hang around this earth for a relatively measurable duration.
Ian Jaye is an artist and designer who possesses a deep passion for integrating traditional and digital art techniques. He attended the College for Creative Studies in Detroit, MI before relocating to Silicon Valley, where he was immersed in a culture of technological innovation.
The past, the concepts, the emotions, the intangible. Borrowing the meanings of the tangible
and putting everything in their place, not where they’re supposed to be.
The body, figured and disfigured, remains to be a favored and celebrated subject in the visual arts. Both artists become more familiar and aware of their own body and, as a result, they acknowledge how the body is actually linked to oneself, perhaps an extension of something that has no shape or no form but not until they paint it on canvas. Both bodies are a work in progress.
This installation is a machine for processing these memories. It’s a vessel for collecting/remixing them in tactile form: specifically vinyl containing music from the past century. I sort different records and manipulate/truncate select parts, by cutting them or by affixing materials to interfere directly with their surfaces.
This is a collection of f*ck ups: where failures become fuel, wounds blossom into new worlds, and missteps merge into one beautiful dance. It’s like being in a fun and chaotic party, falling over the place and remembering vibrant bits and pieces of what transpired. And even if the last call rolls around, you can be happier sporting some bruises than to have done nothing at all. Because as you keep growing and not just grow old, it’s the wrong things that make everything alright.
In the 3rd dimension we inhabit, a myriad of aspects affect the way we exist. For instance how we perceive the dimension as to how macular signals were interpreted by our brains which is in the second dimension. For humans to exist in the plane of reality, we move within this so-called space. This movement is causal to the relationship between time and space.
CHNO’s solo show “Life, Lately” explores the ever-evolving relationship between humans and technology. Through his art, CHNO captures the juxtaposition between the physical and digital worlds, and how they intersect. His paintings / works , which appear to be pixelated and computerized, are a visual representation of the metaverse, illustrating the power of artificial intelligence and its effect on our lives.