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Monterey Bay Aquarium
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shark vs the universe
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André Schulze
http://www.andreschulze.com/
Matthew Luckiesh. Spiral, Mirror Magic, Rotating Mason, Twisted-Cord Illusion (Straight Cords), Twisted-Cord Illusion ((Concentric Circles), Brightness-Contrast, Concave and Convex Hemispheres Lighted by Large Angle Light-Source, Directional Illusion, Reversible Cubes. Visual Illusions. 1922.
Thomas W Schaller
Piccadilly Circus section 1928
Three Sides of Nazareth by Nicolas Jaar
Julien Nonnon, hundreds of french kissing couples projected across Paris
Robin Friend
Formations
Wilhelmina Barns-Graham
Alice Wellinger
“Day and night” Illustrations and personal work
“Daydream of a moth”. Acrylic on wood // “How to grow up” (in 5000 easy steps ;-) unpublished editorial Illustration // “The horsegirl” Poster // “Déjà vu!” Acrylic on board // "The magician" Poster
alice-wellinger.com
Chrissy Angliker, Paintings.
Almost completely abstracted paintings of swimmers and beach-goers by artist Chrissy Angliker.
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Kevo Abbra & Osborne Macharia
Kipipiri 4
This is the story of a special unit of 4 women in a small village within Kipipiri Forest. They were the wives to 4 of the Mau Mau generals and just like their men, they too had leadership roles. This women would be endowed in the most unique hair styles whenever a full moon was approaching. To the ordinary folk this was normal but to the villagers of Kipipiri their hair style was symbolic. Little is known of the 4 brave women till now…..
BOBO: She was the leader of the Kipipiri 4. Once she did her hair, she would walk majestically and gracefully across the village without uttering a word. This was a message to the village women that at midnight they were going to visit the men deep in the forest. Her hair was twisted and curled in a complex design to form a route map to the caves that only her 2nd in command would interpret. Never did they get lost or caught.
CHEP: She was 2nd in command and was always behind Bobo. Being the arms bearer, she was a crafted fighter with more than normal night vision. Her work was to smuggle knives and other blunt weapons for sharpening to and from the Mau Mau hideouts as well as fresh supply of weapons inside her hair.
ACHI: She was the chief cook in the village and in charge of transporting food to the Mau Mau fighters. Her hair was weaved to support carrying baskets of food. At a glance one could tell she had a very strong postured neck. She always prepared an assortment of meals to the fighter’s liking.
MWENDE: She was the lead entertainer and the only one among the 4 who never went into the forest. Instead she stayed behind preparing the women in the village in welcoming their men back home. She was a great dancer with powerful vocals and would lead the women in song and dance as the men approached home. She designed her own mouth piece that had pipes connected to vocal resonators in her hair.
Props / Styling / Production: KEVIN ABRAHAM Make Up Artist: VALARY MDEIZI Hair Stylist: RICHARD KINYUA & CORRINE MUTHONI Illustrator: JEFF OTIENOAssistants: VICTOR NDALO, JARED MAINA, JOSEPH KYULE.
Sally Deng’s “Women Work” at KP Projects.
Currently on view at KP Projects’s Square Gallery in Los Angeles, California is artist Sally Deng’s solo exhibition, “Women Work.”
In “Women Work”, Sally initially set out to portray the type of society women would create if our current one was torn down. What would be salvaged and what would be left behind? The direction changed, however, when it became apparent that the question to ask was not what women would do in an imaginary world, but what they are doing now.
“Women Work” is on display until November 8th, 2016.
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Torben Eskerod