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Monthly Archives: July 2021

  1. Contemporary Artists – Famous for a Reason, The Biggest Names in 2021

    When you’ve got over 12 years of experience in supplying art for hotel interior design and other venues, you learn a thing or two about the names that are worth watching. This post is written as a celebration of some of the most exciting contemporary artists in 2021.


    Their innovation, bravery, and artistic flair continue to shape the world of art and its role in our everyday lives. If you haven’t seen these names before – listen up; they’re really quite something. They help inspire us to provide incredible art for venues everywhere.


    Contemporary Artists Definition


    The contemporary artists on this page have been chosen, in part, for their spectacular wall art that breathes new life into any room it touches. These artists are still practicing today and contribute a rich, unique perspective to the world of contemporary art.


    Read on to get inspired!


    #01 Liu Xiaodong


    Liu Xiaodong’s large-scale paintings capture global challenges such as the climate crisis, economic catastrophes, and human displacement. These are explored with both grace and bravery and confront the viewer with subjects that are unshakably human.

    Each composition is built with a level of intricacy and care that connects profoundly to the subject matter of each piece. First rising from the Chinese Neo-Realism period in the 90s, Xiaodong has been contributing spectacular wall art to the world ever since.


    #02 Takashi Murakami


    Taking influence from contemporary Japanese art and pop culture, Takashi Murakami’s paintings strike an idiosyncratic harmony between fine art, history, and popular culture. This artist is often fondly referred to as the ‘Japanese Andy Warhol’.

    Murakami’s dedication to emerging artists is particularly noteworthy. His regular art fairs are designed to champion new artists from Japan and beyond. With bold colours, striking motifs and a flair for levity, Murakami is one of those contemporary artists we keep coming back to.


    #03 David Hockney


    David Hockney is considered by many to be one of the most important contributors to the Pop Art movement of the 20th century. His work continues to have great influence on contemporary art around the world.

    In fact in 2018, his piece, Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures), became the most expensive piece of art by a living artist ever sold at auction. His colourful prints and paintings inspire new generations of artists every year.


    #04 Cecily Brown


    Parallels are often drawn between Cecily Brown and artists such as Bacon or Willem de Kooning. Her bright, vibrant paintings shift constantly between figurative and abstract models. Their expressive style has captured the attention of critics around the world.


    What is particularly striking about Brown’s work is its ability to render paint as if it were human flesh. The human form comes to life on the canvas, evoking themes of life, death, and all worldly desires in between.


    #05 Njideka Akunyili Crosby



    This artist's spectacular wall art explores a kind of liminal space experienced by immigrants around the world. It is neither Nigerian nor American – it is something uncomfortably in between.

    Colourful, eye-catching collages capture scenes of everyday life, interiors, and social gatherings. They explore the rich history of Nigeria and its existence in today’s post-colonial landscape. This artist’s work is regularly featured at renowned galleries around the world – certainly a name worth knowing.


    SOA Arts – Hotel Interior Design and More


    At SOA Arts, we have over a decade’s experience in curating, commissioning, and sourcing spectacular art for your business or commercial venue. Our wholesale art is ideally suited for hotel interior design, restaurant interiors, and much more.

    Our catalogue is updated constantly in line with trends and changes in the industry worldwide. Get in touch today with your questions, queries, and inquiries. We work flexibly and are confident we can make things work for you.



  2. 10 Contemporary Art Museums Around the World You Should Visit


    In the English language, ‘modern’ and ‘contemporary’ are synonyms. But in the art world, these two words have completely different meanings. To understand contemporary art, we must first decipher the two terms.


    The term ‘modern’ within the context of art describes art that was created between 1860 and 1970. Art during this period was more focused on freedom of experimenting with different styles of art and mediums than focusing on traditional art ideals such as realism.


    From 1970, the art world was introduced to postmodernism. During this time, technology was advancing and there was an increase in the use of video and performance art. Artists began to focus on creating art in response to the latest trends. This was the birth of contemporary art.


    The spirit behind contemporary art is one of inquiry and the powerful combination of different ideas, subjects, methods, and materials that typically challenge traditional art principles. Traditional art relies on organized principles and ideologies. But contemporary art is diverse. It is created today about today.

    Contemporary art embraces the audience, so they become an important part of the creation process. This was not always the case before 1970. Perhaps this is what drives the spirit of experimentation and constant questioning in contemporary art.


    There are many museums around the world housing contemporary art pieces. Let us explore these museums briefly.


    1. The MOMA

    Inside the MOMA


    New York’s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), opened in 1929. It houses the world's most iconic art pieces from the 20th century to contemporary times. It has had shows such as ‘Out of Time: a Contemporary View’, which showed contemporary art from the Museum’s collection focused on the tensions embedded in recent experiences of time, as expressed in art made in the past few decades.


    2. Tate Modern


    Inside Tate Modern


    Tate Modern is Europe’s most visited modern art gallery and is renowned for its architecture as well the diverse art pieces it houses. It offers art covering the entire history of modern art from the 20th century to modern times. On top of its permanent collection, it offers well-curated free displays, performances, tours, talks, workshops, and exhibitions.


    3. Museum of Contemporary Art Shanghai (MOCA)


    Inside MoCA Shanghai


    Founded in 2005, the MoCA Shanghai was the first private contemporary art museum in China. The vision of its founders was to gather excellent artwork from around the world and showcase contemporary Chinese artists. The institution prides itself on being multidisciplinary and has collaborated with the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. It has also collaborated with East Asia Contemporary Art Exhibition, which included works from China, Taiwan, Japan, and Korea. They have also exhibited contemporary art from Hungary, Indonesia, India, and many other countries.


    4. Guggenheim Bilbao


    The Guggenheim Bilbao


    The Guggenheim Bilbao, located in Spain was created by architect Frank Gehry. It draws in contemporary art lovers and tourists alike. Large-scale works are regularly exhibited to include those by Andy Warhol and Rothko.


    5. Stedelijk Museum

    Stedelijk Museum

    Stedelijk Museum


    Located in Amsterdam’s Museum Quarter, the Stedelijk Museum is the Netherlands’ home for modern and contemporary art. It is currently exhibiting ‘Tomorrow is a Different Day’ an exhibition with international artists and designers who are helping shape changes today and tomorrow.


    6. MOMAT, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo


    Inside MOMAT


    Japan’s art scene has fully embraced contemporary art. At MOMAT, you are sure to find masterpieces created by Japanese artists from the beginning of the 20th century. It houses over 13,000 paintings, videos, photographs, prints, and sculptures.


    7. The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia


    The MCA


    The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA) houses a diverse collection of art of all forms, including painting, photography, sculpture, and moving video.



    8. Today Art Museum

    Outlooking the Today Art Museum


    Today Art Museum is a private, fully self-funded art museum located in Beijing. It focuses on contemporary artworks of promising local and international young artists. The artwork here is unique and visitors can get a glimpse of sculptures, paper art, and oil paintings.


    9. Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia

    Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia


    The focus of this museum is Spanish contemporary art. One of the most famous paintings in the museum is Picasso’s Guernica. Also works by Dali and other contemporary artists such as Gris, Miró and many other modern geniuses are worth seeing.


    10. National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens

    National Museum of Contemporary Art


    The National Museum of Contemporary Art was established in October 2000 and is become renowned for collecting and exhibiting contemporary Greek and international art. The rotating exhibitions focus on issues of international contemporary art covering painting, installations, photography, video, new media, and "experimental" architecture.


    It's time to say goodbye.

  3. Shining Rot| New Artworks from Bad Fruit by Artist Kathleen Ryan

    Does it exactly mean nothing when things that people think are meaningless?

    Since inviting things can be created, why should rotten things not be worth making?

    Recently, the latest collection of rotten fruits by Sculpture Artist Kathleen Ryan are on show at the Karma Gallery in New York -including cherries, lemons, and Halloween pumpkins.

    The giant bad fruit is covered with organically grown mold and rotting skin studded with glass beads and gems (freshwater pearls, turquoise, rose quartz, amber, pink opal, and amethyst). Usually, Ryan prefers to use precious, shiny stones to show decay and ordinary glass beads to represent the original parts of the fruit.

    Kathleen Ryan

    The Los Angeles artist

    Web:www.kathleen-ryan.com

    ins:katieryankatieryan


    Artist Kathleen Ryan is an artist from New York, USA. She studied studio art and anthropology at Pitzer College and received her Master of Fine Arts degree from UCLA. Undertaken extensive artistic practices by the young artist, the Bad Fruit series, one of the most eye-catching pieces in her oeuvre, has garnered numerous exhibitions. She uses precious and semi-precious stones to cover the surface of large fruit models to create jeweled fruits of enormous size.


    -01- Bad Cherries

    Sculpture Artist Kathleen Ryan challenges the conventional aesthetics that these fruits are not the freshest images in people's minds instead coated with mold. Her project is called Bad Fruit.

    Today we are going to share with you some new artworks from Bad Fruit. Besides lemons, she also created cherries, pumpkins, watermelons, grapes, and more fruits.

    Kathleen Ryan says the sculptures have a beautiful and joyful look, as well as ugly and unsettling.

    Bad cherries, 2021

    Bad cherries, 2021(details)

    The rotting fruit displays rich variations of color, which marries with dozens of precious and semi-precious stones by Kathleen Ryan: Amazon stone, agate, quartz, rose quartz, turquoise, jade, jasper, serpentine, smoky quartz, olive jade, fluorite, amethyst, tree agate, Russian serpentine, marble, emerald, abalone shell, coral, freshwater pearl.

    Bad cherries with daisy chain, 2021

    Bad cherries, 2021(details)

    Kathleen Ryan comments on the culture of excess consumption with her collection Rotten, oversized fruit sculptures. These fragments transform discarded and rotting fruits into beautifully sophisticated artworks using a styrofoam base and beads from countless carved precious or semi-precious stones.


    -02- Bad lemon (sea witch)


    Bad lemon (sea witch)


    Bad lemon (armadillo), 2021

    To make the fruit, Ryan starts with a large polystyrene base 28 inches wide. First, the artists make some patterns using paint to show which part of a lemon or peach will decay. Next, Pierce the foam with steel spikes, pinning down a row of gems. From pale freshwater pearls to dark-green serpentine, these beads subtly impersonate the rotting flesh of the fruit.


    -03- Jackie

    Jackie, 2021


    -04- Bad Fruits Basket

    People always search for meaning and value in things, including art, but is that necessary? Artists depicted bizarre, seemingly meaningless objects with exquisite materials to express questions and satires about values, desires, and meanings.

     

    Other Artworks

    -01-

    -02-


    -03-

    Here is a comment from a netizen: Microorganisms do not think they are beautiful or not, and it is only a natural process for decay. Don't people always say that nature is beautiful? Alas, humans, only accept flowers bloom but not flowers fade?

    What do you think of these sculptures?



  4. Paper Sulpture| Artists Use A Series of Cardboard to Present Amazing Artworks

    01 / Black and White Paper Sculpture, Presenting the Unique Beauty of Geology and Landform


    Visual artist Scott Hazard uses some shattered pieces of the paper or fabric, overlapping and arranging organically to present its unique geoecology and landscape with an artistic style, shaping the visual landscape in picturesque disorder. It looks like caves, and uneven canyons or hills in high and low, with unique visual appealing and capturing the imagination. The whole thing is a huge swell, the upwelling of life. My eyes feasted on the outline of swell and sweep.


    Scott Hazard imprinted words on stacked pieces of paper. From a distance, the collocation of text and cardboard is like ink and wash painting. Close up, the text wanders between the cardboard, capturing people's eyes, from far to near, and from near to far, creating a more dynamic reading experience. In this series of artworks, Scott Hazard's understanding of space is similar to the Buddhist "void". It represents a pause of thought and mental emptiness.

    Right Behind You

    Medium: Sculpture (wood, paper, acrylic, archival ink.)
    Size: 31.5 X 45.5” X 4” deep (Framed) 
    2017

    Cultivate

    Medium: Sculpture (wood, paper, acrylic, archival ink.)
    Size: 31.5 X 45.5” X 4” deep (Framed) 
    2017


    This

    Medium: Sculpture (wood, paper, acrylic, archival ink.)
    Size: 31.5 X 45.5” X 4” deep (Framed) 
    2017

    Surface Opened

    Medium: Sculpture (printmaking paper, text, maple wood frame/box) 
    Size: 13” X 13” X 6” deep.
    2016


    Hold This Line

    Medium: Sculpture (printmaking paper, text, maple wood frame/box) 
    Size: 13” X 13” X 6” deep.
    2016


    Sow Wild

    Medium: Sculpture (printmaking paper, text, maple wood frame/box) 
    Size: 15” X 15” X 8”
    2016

    Stone, Drop, Trace

    Medium: Sculpture (Maple, acrylic, paper, text.) 
    Size: 16” X 16” X 8”
    2017

    Wild World

    Medium: Sculpture (Maple, acrylic, paper, text.) 
    Size: 16” X 16” X 8”
    2017



    The overall white sculpture, through the black text, forms a combination of black and white composition, not only in the visual contrast and highlights, and the text also represents the human civilization, so that human beings and nature form an inseparable whole, improve the overall level for the artwork.



    02 / Unique Paper Sculpture, Look Like Rolling Earth

    Paper sculpture artist Annie creates scale-like paper sculptures through distinctive paper carving, the surface of ups and downs and well-arranged. It looks like the rolling earth or geographical features from above. It is not only saturated with fancy but also the aesthetic feeling of Art Deco. One gets different impressions of the artwork when viewing it from different views.


    It's time to say goodbye.

  5. Yayoi Kusama| 18 great places to see the Art Installations of Yayoi Kusama

    Yayoi Kusama is one of the world's most expensive female artists and a national treasure in Japan. Her bright red wig and quirky polka dot suit made her one of the most recognizable artists.


    In 2016, Yayoi Kusama was the only visual artist on Time magazine's list among the 100 most influential people. Yayoi Kusama has got a gift for outstanding artistic talent, works in many artistic fields, including painting, sculpture, prints, installation, performance art, and literature. Her works blend many artistic styles, such as surrealism, minimalism, pop art, zero society, and nihilistic movement, which cannot be easily classified or imitated.

    Having suffered from mental illness since childhood, she once admitted that art was her cure, saying: "If it weren't for art, I would have killed myself." At the age of 92, she is still working on her art business and will have four exhibitions this year, including her large outdoor sculpture exhibition, Kusama: Cosmic Nature, at the New York Botanical Garden at the beginning of April, which features polka dot plant sculptures and a whole new "Infinite Mirror Room."


    Although these exhibitions are time-limited, Kusama's public sculptures are permanently open in many parts of the world, and several galleries have permanent collections of her art. We make a list of 16 great places for you, and maybe one or two of them are near you.

    Let's enjoy the ecstasy of a speckled world.

     


    01. "Cosmic Nature" at the New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) | New York


    The installations of Yayoi Kusama will last eight months at the New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) through Oct. 31, 2021. The artist is fascinated with the natural world all her life. Giant floral sculptures blend perfectly with her signature polka-dot installation.

    ▲Obsession with Flowers, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times


    Spotted pumpkins and psychedelic flowers are among the most symbolic pieces in Kusama's "Cosmos of Nature" exhibition, which also features four new works by the Japanese artist. Visitors are welcomed by a new installation called "Dancing Pumpkins," which uses tentacle-like legs to lift its dark and yellow torso aloft.

    ▲I Want to Fly into Space, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times

    shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times


    Among the more interactive creations, Kusama's first-ever enclosed greenhouse and a new infinity room using natural light and stained glass.


    ▲Pumpkins call for love beyond infinity, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times

    ▲Star Pumpkin, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times


    ▲Ascension of Polkadots on the Trees, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times

    ▲Narcissus Garden, shot by Heather Sten, via The New York Times


    02. Most Famous Pumpkin in the World | Naoshima


    Pumpkin, 1994, Benesse Art Site, Naoshima, Japan

    When it comes to the public sculpture of Yayoi Kusama, the Great Pumpkin on Naoshima, Japan, is probably the first one that pops into your mind. Whether you've been to the Seto Inland Sea Art Festival or not, you've probably seen this pumpkin while surfing the Internet.


    The yellow polka-dot pumpkin with vivacious colors faces the sea and, rather than being out of place with nature, has a sense of reality that allows it to blend into nature. It is affectionately known as the "pumpkin at the end of the world."

    Not only sitting the yellow pumpkin there but there is also a giant red polka-dot pumpkin near the dock, which is known as the "Keeper of Naoshima". Today, the two pumpkins have become the unofficial symbol of Naoshima, making the sea and island a natural art space that attracts thousands of visitors.

    03. Yayoi Kusama Museum | Tokyo



    ▲Opening Commemorative Exhibition of Yayoi Kusama Museum


    The museum founded by Yayao Kusama herself is a better choice to visit than any other limited or unlimited exhibition. In 2017, the Yayoi Kusama Museum opened in Benzentamachi, Shinjuku district, Tokyo.

    At the end of April, Yayoi Kusama's new exhibition, Between Mystery and Symbol: Monochromatic Monochrome by Yayoi Kusama, opens. For a personal art museum, the things exhibited here are more in-depth and less popular than the well-known pumpkins and polka dots.

    Canned desserts with red polka dots and pumpkins, sold only at the Yayoi Kusama Museum, are also an important attraction for viewers.


    04. Pumpkin's Infinite Universe | Canberra


    ▲《The Spirits of the Pumpkins Descended into the Heavens》, 2017



    From December 2018, The Australian National Gallery in Canberra has been The permanent home of Yayoi Kusama's Goddoned Pumpkins masterpiece The Spirits of The Pumpkins Quadriga Into The Heavens. For the last two or three years, the work has been open to the public for free.

    Rows of pumpkins are reflected numerous times by the mirror, and when you among them, you are immersed in an infinite universe composed of pumpkins. This work, combined with her signature polka-dot pumpkins and mirrored house setup, is also a more diverse set of ideas that we can explore from it.

    05. Crowdfunding for a Piece of Installation by Yayoi Kusama | Toronto

    ▲ 《INFINITY MIRRORED ROOM – LET'S SURVIVE FOREVER》, 2017


    When Kusama's exhibition came to the Art Museum of Ontario in 2016, people even lined the street to buy tickets. After the show ended, the Art Museum of Ontario bought Kusama's Infinity Mirrored Room -- Let's Survive Forever through crowdfunding for $2 million, to make Kusama's work permanent.

    In this infinite mirror room, the silver sphere is the main character, sitting irregularly at the foot of the mirror, which causes the spheres to form some regular arrangement.

    06. Flowers That Bloom in Guangzhou | Guangzhou

    "Flowers That Bloom in Guangzhou" is her only public art sculpture in China. It made its public debut at the end of 2016 in the IGC Art Park of Tianhui Square in Guangzhou, but few people paid attention to it.


    It is also Kusama's biggest public art sculpture outside of Japan, with its highest point 7.5 meters above the ground. Yayoi Kusama created the work after learning the name of "Flower City" in Guangzhou. "The dots represent the touch of the endless vitality, and the flowers covered by the dots signify the radiance of love that never goes out," she said.

    07. The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away On View | Los Angeles ( L.A)

    ▲ The Broad


    ▲ 《Infinity Mirrored Room-The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away On View》, 2013

    In downtown Los Angeles, two classic works by Yayoi Kusama are collected at The Broad, an art gallery founded by two philanthropists.

    The Infinite Mirror House, created in 2013, Kusama believes that the souls of millions of light-years alive. The room is entirely covered with mirrors, and ten LED lights create a myriad of reflected light, where everyone can be an observer of the world.

    ▲ 《Longing for Eternity》, 2017

    The other "Infinite Mirrored Room" is filled with eternal longing. Even when peering through Windows-like plane portholes, the room filled with LED light can still bring visual immersion, and the extreme repetition allows a sense of infinity and transcendence to burst out.


    08. Kusama Yayoi's Favorite | Tsumari in Bloom

    "Of all the open-air sculptures I have created for Japan and the rest of the world, 'Tsumari in Bloom' is my favorite." That's what Yayoi Kusama said herself. So go to the fields of Echigo's wife district in Niigata City, and you'll see one of Kusama's favorite artworks.


    Yayoi Kusama felt calmer than ever when she saw the colossal flower sculptures installed in the fields. She described herself as a flower bathed in the air of Tsumari in bloom and brilliant sunshine falling from the sky.

    09. Love Forever, Singing in Towada| Aomori

    There is a permanent collection of 38 commissioned works of art at the Modern Art Museum in Towada, Aomori county, including Love Forever, Singing in Towada, which was created especially for the county by Yayoi Kusama. The eight sculptures with Polka dot contain constant themes in Kusama: pumpkins, girls, puppies, and mushrooms.

    A girl named Hanako-chan, the avatar of Yayoi Kusama, looks resolutely ahead and sings heartily in the fields, full of energy. The interior of the giant pumpkins is also fascinating, with colored spots twinkling in the darkness, inviting viewers into a world that is constantly spreading.


    10. Matsumoto Art Museum | Matsumoto


    Despite her strained relationship with her native city of Matsumoto, they eventually shared artistic ideas. Matsumoto Art Museum, which opened in 2002, is filled with her sculptures here and there, even its glass walls and vending machines where have been invaded by Kusama's polka dot.


    11. You Who Are Getting Obliterated in the Dancing Swarm of Fireflies| Phoenix


    Yayoi Kusama's lighting installation, You Who Are Getting Obliterated in the Dancing Swarm of Fireflies, is permanently housed in the Phoenix Museum of Fine Arts in the United States. In a dark room, the mirror reflects 250 colored LED lights. Visitors enter it, like being surrounded by fireflies at night. The inspiration for the work comes from a Japanese folk tale about a man who has 10,000 fireflies.

    Since it's a permanent installation, there's almost no queuing to get in during the morning and evening of the workday, and you can enjoy a cyclic light show in peace.

    12. "Narcissus Garden" at Lockaway Disused Factory | New York


    ▲ In 2018, in Rockaway, Yayoi Kusama installed the "Narcissus Garden" for a specific location.

    For its summer heat and crowded city, The Rockaway Peninsula in Queens, New York is a popular destination for people looking for a break. Located in an old train garage in Tildenburg, the installation consists of 1,500 mirrored stainless steel spheres. The Daffodil Garden made its first appearance in 1966 as part of an unofficial show at the 33rd Venice Biennale.

    The spheres mirror the graffiti walls and rusting beams of the dilapidated building. While viewers stroll through the glittering gardens, they also get a glimpse of the damage Hurricane Sandy caused to the building and the area in 2012. Rockaway is the third iteration of the "Daffodil Garden" in 2018, which is said to be a "celebration" of resuming work for years.


    13. Invite guests to cover the house with fake flowers | Victoria


    ▲ Flower Obsession 2017


    Famous Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama is known for her explosions of color, matrices of light, and tendency to cover many of her works with dazzling layers of dots. In one of her most interactive installations, the artist conveys her interest in dot making to visitors. The Vanishing House invites guests to cover the interior of their home by putting colorful stickers on the walls, furniture, and floors.

    In her recent commission for the inaugural National Gallery of Victoria Triennale, the artist has transformed this concept to include floral patterns. For this piece, Flower Obsession (2017), guests were given artificial gerbera daisies and Flower stickers that could be attached to any surface they chose. By the end of the four-month triennial, the flowers had completely covered the entire apartment. The floral theme touches on the beginning of the artist's artistic creation, referencing memories from her childhood.

    14. Les tulipes de Shangri-la | Lille


    ▲ 《Les tulipes de Shangri-la》, 2004


    In 2004, the French city of Lille became the European Capital of Culture. To this end, Yayao Kusama created a large public sculpture called Les Tulipes de Shangri-La, in which several polka-dot tulips grow in the middle of the Francois-Mitterrand Square, the tallest one reaching 8 meters. The vibrant colors collide with the surrounding grey buildings, bringing vitality to the tulips that belong exclusively to Yayoi Kusama.


    15. Infinite Accumulation | London


    Outside Liverpool Street station on London's Elizabeth Line, Kusama's first permanent art installation in the UK, Infinite Accumulation, will be completed, with her signature polka-dots transformed into flowing, mirrored steel balls that guide passengers from the public area outside the station to the east entrance.


    "London is a city where people of all cultural backgrounds are constantly on the move," Kusama said. These spheres symbolize the unique individual, and the curves supporting the spheres allow us to imagine a fundamental social structure."


    16. Beverly Garden Park | Los Angeles


    ▲ 《Hymn of Life: Tulips》, 2007


    Taking a walk to Beverly Gardens Park, you can meet with some of Kusama's classic works. Hymn of Life: Tulips, 2007, is made of painted fiberglass, ceramic tiles, and steel. In the days when the tulips are dead, these "tulips" will always flourish.


    17. Mattress Factory that doesn't sell mattresses | Pittsburgh


    ▲ 《Repetitive Vision》, 1996


    In Pittsburgh, there is the Mattress Factory, which doesn't sell mattresses. Once a real factory, transformed into space for artists to place installations 40 years ago, it is now a landmark of Modern Art in Pittsburgh and the first art space in the United States to buy Kusama's work.

    Many visitors remember these polka-dot dummies well, which come from Yayoi Kusama's book, Repetitive Vision, even in the world of repeated dots, but your mood are always new.

    ▲ 《Infinity Dots Mirrored Room》, 1996


    Yayoi Kusama saw the mirrored house as a gateway to the other world. In this infinite mirrored room, with colored polka-dots on the floor, she powerfully evokes personal identity, a sense of reality, discussing broader questions about the permeability of the boundary between the self and the outside world.


    18. The Only Permanent Narcissus Garden | Brazil


    The iconic "Narcissus Garden" was one of nine new works of art collected at the Inhotim Institute, a famous art museum and botanical Garden in Brazil, in 2009. It is also the only place in the world with a permanent collection of "narcissus gardens".

    In 1966, during the 33rd Venice Biennale, Kusama took her first "Narcissus Garden," 1,500 metal-coated plastic balls that she sold outside the pavilion for $2 each. She intended to satirize the commercialized art environment, and this set of works became an important turning point in her career.


    It's time to say goodby~



  6. Art of Quarantine | Famous Paintings Get a New Look for COVID-19 Quarantine Teaching

    Jesus enjoys the dinner alone, praying madonna does not forget to wear gloves to anti-epidemic...

    During the current coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19), the Ukrainian government has launched a series of advertising campaigns that incorporate hygiene practices such as social distance, disinfecting, wearing masks, replacing cash with credit cards, and handwashing into several classical art pieces.

    The series of "Art of Quarantine" was produced by advertising agency Looma and launched in association with Ministry of Culture and Informational Security of Ukraine in 2020, aiming to remind more people to develop good habits to stop the spread of COVID-19 and stay safe.

    ONE| Art of Quarantine


    9 epidemic prevention habits are worth learning.


    -01-

    Dinner for One

    In the famous painting " Last Supper" Darwin depicts the last supper of Jesus with the Twelve Apostles. In the "Art of Quarantine", the 12 disciples in the original painting disappear without a trace, leaving only the masked Jesus and his meals, which convey the ideas of "keep your mask on at all times" and "keep a social distance".

    -02-

    Sanitization of Adam


    The Creation of Adam is a painting by Michelangelo for the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. It depicts God's creation of Adam, the first human being, bypassing the fire of life from his fingers to Adam. In the "Art of Isolation", God hands Adam a bottle of alcohol as a reminder of the importance of disinfection and personal hygiene in daily life.

    -03-

    The Son of Man Wearing a Face Mask


    Rene Magrit created The Son of Man as a self-portrait. The painting depicts a man in a bowler hat and suit, his face largely hidden by a green apple. In the new version, the man's mask covers his eyes, nose, and mouth. Although not a standard way to wear a mask, it highlights the importance of wearing one humorously.

    -04-

    Praying Madonna Using Gloves



    In "Praying Madonna" by Italian artist Giovanni Battista Sa, Maria is immersed in inner communion, her hands clasped in prayer.

    In the "Art of Quarantine", the creator's witty take the praying madonna Maria wears disposable gloves to meticulously "avoid contact with potentially infected surfaces."

    -05-

    Lady with the Suppliers


    Lady with an Ermine is a panel oil painting by Leonardo da Vinci from 1490 depicting the dignified and quiet Cecilia Gallerani. Now the silver ermine on the woman's hand in the original one has been replaced with bags of rice and pasta. The Ukrainian government is encouraging people to go out at one time to buy enough food and to go out less often during the coronavirus pandemic.

    -06-

    A Young Man Washing His Hands


    "Portrait of a Young Man in Red," painted circa 1505 by Raphael, shows a man in red standing in front of a magnificent landscape with his cold eyes. In the Art of Quarantine, the man quietly and carefully washes his hands at the tap, while the man looks at the crowd with a hot, direct stare as if urging people to wash their hands more often.

    -07-

    Orpheus and Euridyce at a Distance


    Leighton's famous painting "Orpheus and Euridyce" depicts the tragic love between Orpheus and Euridyce: Eurydice comes to life with her lover in her arms, but Orpheus cannot look back because of a contract with God. In the background of COVID-19, Orpheus, wearing a mask and gloves, sets his mind not to look back, as if to admonish Eurydith that "we need to keep our social distance."


    -08-

    Napoleon Delivering Takeaways Cross the Alps


    Napoleon Crossing the Alps is the collective name of five oil paintings by Jacques-Louis David. They all show Napoleon crossing St. Bernard Road before launching the Battle of Marengo. Now Napoleon is riding a horse with a takeaway bag on his back, ready to deliver food to customers. The Ukrainian government wants to encourage people to use delivery services more and stay at home by painting.

    -09-

    Mrs. Worrell Paying with Card


    "Mrs. Worrell as Hebe" is an American painter West's work, Mrs. Worrell in the painting incarnate in charge of the goddess of youth Hebe in Greek mythology.
    In the "Art of Quarantine", Mrs. Worrell, in full Epidemic prevention suit, travels to a modern supermarket and pays with a card, to promote credit card payments and reduce the risk of spreading the virus by reducing cash payments.

    ( URL: https://looma.pro/portfolio/art-of-quarantine/)


    TWO | Artistic Creation in the Coronavirus Pandemic


    There is much more to see.

    Except for the above famous paintings, in the coronavirus pandemic, to spread epidemic prevention knowledge and lead the public to better adapt to the epidemic life, the artists have also made great efforts in the creation.

    -01-

    Stay Sane, Stay Safe


    In March 2020, Max Lennart's and Menno de Bruijn launched the website Stay Sane, Stay Safe, to provide more posters to their friends who work in hospitals. Over a year, the website operation gradually matures, where has countless high-quality posters.



    -02-

    Five New Ways to Say Hello



    The animation short films were produced by director Niceshit, screenwriter Lambertini, and Mankarious.

    For prevention, they are trying to change the way people greet each other: long hugs, complex handshakes, and kissing more often only give the virus a chance to spread. Therefore, they hope to use this short film to help solve current social problems interestingly and positively.


    -03-

    Martyna Wójcik-Śmierska


    Martyna Wojcik -Ś Mierska is a graphic designer and illustrator from Poland. Her daily work involves designing posters, covers, and illustrations for books and newspapers.


    To make people better informed, the images of the posters are not too many elements, and the key scenes are paired with the COVID-19 epidemic prevention slogan to help the public increase awareness of the epidemic.



    -04-

    Corona Diaries



    For reducing physical burden, Monique has adjusted the way she paints -- from paper to iPad. The painting mainly presents some daily scenes: Monique has a high fever, insomnia at night, an ambulance outside the window, missing friends, and so on.



    For Monique, the series is really about expressing solidarity with frontline health care workers, homeless people, police, and others. She wants people who see the paintings to understand the daily life of COVID-infected and its sequelae.

    "Please believe that these days will pass!"


    Before the days come, everyone must adhere to the epidemic prevention measures: wear masks, wash hands frequently, take temperature, do not gather, go out less, maintain social distance! Come on!



    Do you know more about paintings about Quarantine? Welcome to share with us! From now on to develop a good habit of Quarantine.

    See you next time~