Tag: installation art

Faig Ahmed:  Constructing and Deconstructing Language in Rugs

Faig Ahmed: Constructing and Deconstructing Language in Rugs

Azerbaijani artist Faig Ahmed is an artist whose work focuses on the construction and deconstruction of traditional patterned rugs and carpets. Carpets were initially seen as a sophisticated form of writing rather than a decorative piece. Each element of the pattern was once a written sign. Ahmed’s work explores how a carpet is more a time structure than a graphical one.

In his recent installation, Thread Installation , he creates a visual deconstruction of the complex design of a rug. The patterns and outline of the rug start with the rectangular shape of the rug, but then the edges extend in long pieces of thread across the room. The effect is a rug that seems to be unraveled or created.
In his artist’s statement, Ahmed says “I’ve been always fond of investigating and researching every detail of anything that had interested me… I’m heretofore harried by a question others have left in childhood – “what is inside?” That’s why I’m changing habitual and visually static objects making them spatial, giving them a new depth. And this as if reveals the essence of this object – the object that was mediocre just a minute ago.”

Ahmed’s work can be see on his artist website www.faigahmed.com.

Image Source:
http://www.faigahmed.com/

 

Links:
http://www.faigahmed.com/

A 10-Story Building Covered With 1,000 Recycled Doors – The art of Choi Jeong-Hwa

A 10-Story Building Covered With 1,000 Recycled Doors – The art of Choi Jeong-Hwa

Artist Choi Jeong-Hwa often works with recycled and found materials.  When asked about art he says, “I believe that everything is art. Every material found in the kitchen, your room, the streets — everything in everyday life can be art.”

Recently he worked with 1,000 recycled doors to transform a plain 10 story building into a bright patterned building in Seoul, Korea.  These plain medium sized, multi-story buildings are called huh ga bang,  and are everywhere in the city next to the old wooden, shingled houses.

The artist, who calls himself an “intruder,” works with ordinary objects in his installations and public projects.

Choi has worked with other found and recycled materials including trash.  He did a piece called Happy Happy Plastic Stadium, where he collected trash from the Olympic games and made a  large installation made of 1.7 million pieces of discarded plastic which covered a stadium in Seoul.

Image Source:
Choi Jeong-Hwa

 

Links:

http://choijeonghwa.com/

http://thecreatorsproject.com/creators/choi-jeong-hwa

Desert Rooftops – an installation of “Surburban” Rooftops in Times Square

Desert Rooftops – an installation of “Surburban” Rooftops in Times Square

Desert Rooftops is a 5,000-square-foot sculpture by artist David Brooks that was recently installed in Times Square that is an a configuration of multiple asphalt shingled rooftops similar to those on suburban developments, new houses, and strip malls. The roofs are built close together, and create a landscape of rooftops, or a image of rolling asphalt dunes or hills.

The piece raises questions issues of the natural and built landscape, and uses humor to present issues about suburban and urban sprawl. The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification defines desertification as: land degradation into arid and dry sub-humid areas resulting from various factors, including human activities and climatic variations derived from over-development, over-grazing and an overworked land. The result is often a depleted landscape inhospitable to other life.

Brooks investigates this idea as it applies to housing communities, which devour more and more land and resources each year.   By definition, the outcome is equivalent to this very process of desertification.

The Last Lot is a  short term donation to Art Production Fund from The Shubert Organization, and is part of the Times Square Alliance’s public art program that works to bring cutting-edge art to Times Square.

The piece will be on view  The Last Lot, (46th Street & 8th Avenue) until February 5th, 2012.

 

Links:

Desert Rooftops – Art Production Fund

David Brooks