object 1 Research
- 佳雨 王
- Jan 26, 2023
- 2 min read
n°011217 Epicéa / Spruce Diam 1800 mm x 80 mm
THIERRY MARTENON
WOOD
By carving, he gives the wood a wave-like grain, but sometimes full of angularity. It gives me the impression of being both soft and hard at the same time.

ELEGANT WOOD
This is a Japanese wall design company. They believe that natural wood panels are designs created by nature. Therefore, each wood grain is different and each wood grain is unique and they combine the wood grain design with the design panels. Each wave pattern is designed to showcase the original grain of the wood to the maximum extent possible.

COLD STRAWS
FRANCESCA PASQUALI
His research begins with the observation of natural forms, the artist captures the structural textures and translates them into them into intricate and delicate works and installations, often using reused plastics and industrial materials.

Fenella Elms
Angles Light and shadow changes and colours
CERAMIC
Porcelain in flowing formations and rhythmic structures; playing with light and shifting with perspective.
The biggest difference to colour comes from lighting; it’s direction, colour and strength, or lack of it. By directing lighting across the work from one direction, the texture wakes up and dances, and the colours vary with reflections and shadows. A light directly on the work, or no light, flattens the texture and reduces the colour palette. Even though the Flow inthese images is multi-coloured, side light and flat light makes a difference to the textural interest.

Shayna Leib
the flow of hot glass
Shayna uses the flow of hot glass, its capacity to freeze an artistic moment in time, and the inherent ability of glass to manipulate optics to express her artistic vision and inner direction.
Each of the glass pieces takes nearly a month to create and involves a painstaking, multi-step process that begins with pulling individual 30-50 foot segments of glass called cane, a step that’s repeated 8 to 200 times depending on the scale of the piece. She generates over 1 mile of thin glass pieces from which she cuts into tens of thousands of segments organized by shape and length. Next begins the tedious process of building the actual sculpture, requiring roughly 45 minutes for each two square inch area.

Ears of Wheat Wall Art
A wall is formed by interspersing ears of wheat, the different lengths of which reflect a sense of hierarchy and give the wall a sense of immersion.

Can't Stop Rolling It Up (Left)
I felt a Funeral, in my Brain,
And Mourners to and fro
Kept treading – treading – till it seemed
That Sense was breaking through(Right)
Mia Liu
Ink, Pencil, Watercolor and Acrylic paint on paper
This author's work is all made up of strips of paper like this, which are painted on and glued bit by bit onto the complete flat surface. Each different piece represents a different emotion or idea.

White textile relief
Ritzi Jacobi and Peter Jacobi
Cotton, sisal, wool, coconut fiber
These pioneers of tapestry renewal did not only explore new forms, techniques and materials. They also transformed the traditional tapestry into a spacious art, thus contributing to a new understanding of textile art as one of the most important forms of artistic expression.

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