Cambodian Tree Projections by Clément Briend
“Cambodian culture is deeply rooted in a spirituality - marked by a belief in genii and fantasy creatures. In a dark cityscape, night reveals the presence of divine creatures on trees and subsequently makes them alive and real. Such nocturnal visions allow us to grasp the way magic profoundly influences how Cambodian people perceive the world.”
Beautiful
(via shinyslingback)
For a split second there, it looked like graffiti’s future was purely virtual. There was the Wiispray controller, which simulated tagging down to the paint drips; and before that there were a number of “light graffiti” projects. But the taggers? They flouted that, and the medium has evolved: Fire tagging, as its known, is the process of spraying your tag, then lighting it on fire before the paint dries.
As Nylon’s blog notes, Ellis G, a well-known street artst formerly known for his drawings in chalk, is now “obsessed” by firetagging. The paint doesn’t burn off completely, though some kids are doing it in lighter fluid. Once the fire has burned out, the tag that remains is a wreathed in tendrils of char and soot—like a street version of Cai Guo-Qiang, who makes drawings by lighting gunpowder atop paper. That’s assuming everything goes right—and in this case, we’re talking about fire+accelerants+drywall (on occassion). In fact students in L.A., a couple years back, burned down part of their school while fire tagging.
Artist Isaiah Stephens has created this drawing series using materials such as mechanical pencils, graphite pencils (2B – 9B), black marker, smooth Bristol paper, and more.
http://illusion.scene360.com/art/35871/something-in-your-eyes/#.ULS-e3wgGSM
Amazing
Party life on the gold coast