Watch artist Julia Sinelnikova’s creative process behind her latest piece “Black Fairy Egg Nest”, exhibited at Wallplay this past month.

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@wallplayground
Watch artist Julia Sinelnikova’s creative process behind her latest piece “Black Fairy Egg Nest”, exhibited at Wallplay this past month.
Body Builder project by Anna Lomax
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Icing on top, Calvin Ross Carl
"These images are intended to nourish trust to “the first impression” - the simplest reaction we get out of anything around us.”
On the Go, a visual diary by Izaak Enciso
via thisispaper
Space invaders, Filip Hodas
Chantal Anderson: In Search Of
As Sinelnikova points out in her artist statement, fairies are represented as both benevolent creatures who grant wishes and tricksters who can thwart even the most noble of plans. In this way fairies seem to be like us, flying between the light and the dark.
Beautiful/Decay Magazine reviews Julia Sinelnikova’s “Black Fairy Egg Nest” installation at wallplay.
Pantone IRL
Wallplay presents BodyMemory: Stories. Beijing artist Yi Zhou explores how we remember our bodies through casted wearable accessories, such as finger necklaces and nose broaches. Opening at Wallplay Shop, Stories will bring on-site casting clinics and select items from this years Beijing Design Week.
Interested in having a body part casted? Schedule an appointment with your name, number and preferred time: [email protected]
Look familiar? We’ve up-cycled past art billboards into one-of-a-kind handmade bags.
In Airbnb Housewarming, designer Daniel Rous and Fabrica Design Studio celebrated the unique experience of sharing a home between guests and hosts. Using a set of avant-garde minimalist furnitures, the pieces connected a different cultural reference with an opulent setting.
via This Is Paper
In his photo series Court Yard, photographer TJ Tambellini studies several iconic courtyard buildings in West Hollywood. By using a sense of pattern and a running flow of color, he captures the overlooked details from these courtyard buildings to add a larger narrative into it.
"My intent is not to document these buildings for what they are, but rather to focus on the details, working with structure, hyperreal color, and framing. It is more of an abstract observation, finding sculptural compositions with complimenting palates” - TJ Tambellini
via Thisispaper
Nine artists are putting a digital twist on instruction-based art, removing the aspect of in-person engagement fundamental to such works by Marcel Duchamp to Yoko Ono. it’s doing it, an online exhibition that launched this week, features computer-generated images that follow sets of rules written by artists. One image from each artist’s instructions — scripted in the form of a computer program — is produced every day over the course of 45 days, replacing the former work; so, if you visit the show on different days, nine new works will greet you every time.
Code-Based Artworks that Reinvent Themselves Every Day
Ph. Viviane Sassen
Lil’ Marilyn by Judith Supine
Joel Rea
Deborah Kass, Paul Kasmin Gallery “Good Times,” 2015