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08 March 2012
Hidden Moves is the toy box for the collected works of Welsh designer and illustrator Rhys Owens. His works are digital creations, formed by combining 3D models, photos and scanned elements. His style stems from his interest in pop culture - comics, games, films, art, design, and anything else he finds of interest. Although not a prolific artist, each piece of Rhys's artwork is designed to be visually unique, utilising real life props and found photos, combined with hand drawn details and skeletal elements. This process gives much of the art associated with Hidden Moves a distinctly urban style.
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07 March 2012
Philippe Constantinesco was born in France in 1982. After having completed his studies in Visual Communication in Strasbourg, he founded Zurich29 with Dorian Gourg (art directors studio, motion & static designers) and has been pursuiing his career in Paris since 2006.
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06 March 2012
Phil Ashcroft's practice explores ideas of narrative and the spectacle within landscape. Referencing the site-specific, his work considers our present-day visions, a climate ever more pertaining to aspiration and speculation within our modern sense of reality. From apocalyptic expectations in our present environmental, financial and political climate, this ‘threat’ of proximity signifies the potential collision that reflects our changing ideology of past modernity, concerns and images.
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05 March 2012
Peter Adamyan is at the ripe age of 24 years old. He grew up in the suburbs of Los Angeles watching cartoons and eating tons of junk food. All throughout his childhood he would draw the cartoon characters of the shows he loved. In high school he was accepted to the Ryman Program, an organization designed to teach young aspiring artists the basics of life drawing. Before attending, during and to this day he spent much time teaching himself the basics of drawing and painting in many mediums eventually leading to his love of oil painting.
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02 March 2012
How much can free space, physical or mental be influenced, changed or extended by artistic individuality and cultural diversity? The artists of the Masala Movement are dealing with this question for quite some time now by turning outside walls into a large canvas in cooperation with local artists. This live art event which already took place in Cairo,Thessaloniki and Kabul offers a visual & audible experience and creates space to meet different individuals for creative and intercultural exchange.
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