Five Copper Petals Dramatically Enclose a Bamboo Yoga Studio in a Lush Bali Village

A yoga and meditation studio in Bali welcomes visitors to relax and stretch under an airy bamboo canopy. A recent project of the local architecture firm IBUKU, “Lumi Shala” is a copper-coated structure with scalloped roofing that layers like five overlapping petals. The metallic covering is met with interlaced bamboo infrastructure inside, as those same botanical-like forms sweep upward in massive arches and “reflect warm golden light onto the bellies of the blonde bamboo ceilings inside, inspiring feelings of lightness and freedom,” the designers said. Earthen walls also support the roof with gaps that allow seamless movement between interior and exterior and sunlight to stream into the space.

Featured Image © Lumi Shala

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Light Art: Global Exhibitions this Season

Light Organ is the collaborative invention of local artists British Jamaican Akeelah Bertram (b. 1990), Leeds-based Adam Glatherine (b. 1983) and creative technologist Simon Fletcher. “We wanted to create something uplifting and playful to encourage people to experiment and share our love of light and sound,” says Bertram. The installation consists of 40 large-scale pipes that react to sound. Visitors are invited to sing, talk and clap into microphones connected to the large-scale rods. Based on the frequency, intensity and volume of noises, the sculptural forest will light up and change colour. Each sequence of hues is unique. Throughout the winter, the venue will offer various programmes, including musicians and poets.

Featured Image: Light Organ | Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield, from 17 November

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Acrylic On Canvas or Paper -vs- Digital Art

Jay Zerbe, Abstractionist & Instructor Makes Significant Announcement Following 60-Year Career As A Professional Abstract Artist

 

Life isn’t static, nor are the decisions artists occasionally must make to sustain their practice and preserve the integrity of their work and artistic legacy.

Jay Zerbe has created a wide range of work during his six-decade career as a professional artist, driven by his natural passion, curiosity, and love of art, abstraction, and chaos in nature. His work includes illustration drawings on paper, collages constructed of stapled found materials, and later in his career, collages created from clippings of digital images taken of various original paintings and assembled into new compositions he refers to as eCollage.

Looking closely, one brilliant effect demonstrated in Jay’s eCollage work is the natural brush strokes, dripping, and paint textures carried over from the image clippings of his original acrylic on canvas work. In his eCollage, he creates a new digital collage displaying a representation of the physical processes of other works of his art. To truly understand this master’s technique, one must visit his portfolio at jayzerbe.com and examine his acrylic on canvas and acrylic on paper work, within examples of his eCollage work, where fragments of his physical painting processes are visible.

Throughout his career, Zerbe’s primary focus and the foundation of his practice has been his acrylic on canvas paintings, which have received notable gallery representation and now exist in private collections globally. Today, he continues to create acrylic on canvas art, material collage, and digital eCollage from his Indiana studio, surrounded by his beloved antiques, private art collection, meadow, and natural pond.

Like most artists, he wonders how his work will continue to gain recognition in an ever-changing and expanding world of on-demand automation, AI, and technology, and how it all relates to the traditional gallery system.

Historically, gallery and dealer representation have been pivotal in introducing artists and helping to establish their reputation among buyers in known art markets. However, among the majority of people, most of society’s growing population cannot afford to buy original gallery art. As the wealth gap grows, new generations and expanding populations will miss opportunities to experience the joy and wonder of discovering, appreciating, owning, and collecting original art.

Pair this with the reality of space and supplies, as well as the high cost of sustaining a professional art practice, and one can see how visibility and awareness can be a life force for professional artists driven by a passion for creating art but also experiencing the same economic challenges we all do.

Professional artists often consider generating awareness of their work and earning revenue by offering commercial print reproductions of their original art. And the private collection of high-quality archival print editions is growing.

Combined with traditional gallery and agent representation, marketing limited edition, ethically sourced commercial prints of an artist’s original art can promote greater awareness of the artist’s brand while reinforcing, and for some artists increasing, the value of their original work because of the added exposure and expanding market demand for limited numbered fine-art editions.

The desirability of the original art, limited print offerings, and the artist’s reputation are primary forces that determine and drive the valuation of print editions making them an easy choice for collectors.

Whether or not to make archival prints of original artwork is the individual choice of each artist. Some hold tight to traditional practices, and some see the inevitable evolutionary changes in our global communities. While making archival prints has its benefits, it also has potential drawbacks that might result from over-commercializing the artist’s work, thereby over-saturating product and brand awareness. Ultimately, whether or not to make archival prints should be based on an artist’s goals and circumstances. Misused, producing commercial art products can lead to over-saturation and devaluation of the artist’s work. Used correctly, it can be a strategic method for growth.

In the following Q&A, we ask Jay about his decision, after 60 years of practice, to now, for the first time, offer high-quality, limited-edition archival prints of his original acrylic on canvas and acrylic on paper artwork from his studio inventory and his own private collection.

Q. Jay, thank you for speaking candidly with the artistvenu community and beyond about this pivotal change in your art practice. Many enjoy the process behind your digital eCollage but may also agree that your work’s foundation exists within your original acrylic on canvas and acrylic on paper paintings.

You have never released limited edition archival prints of your original canvas and paper paintings, so why now?

A. Throughout my life, I have noticed constant changes in our society, the world, and even the universe around us thanks to exploration developments such as the Hubble and the James Webb Space Telescope. With my husband’s passing, I often think of the world, my place in it, and how the art I love so much fits and will continue to exist in the awareness of others and future generations. I am grateful for my many gallery opportunities over the years. I seek to support these professional relationships, but I also see a need and way to help promote awareness of abstraction and art collection by introducing my work to a changing world and newer generations in an affordable and controlled offering. I can do this by releasing limited editions of some work in my portfolio.

prints selectively and at a smaller scale from the original canvas and paper works. This way, others can afford and enjoy collecting my work.

Q. What exactly are you releasing, and what do you mean by “controlled offering”?

A. Paintings previously sold and pieces with current Gallery representation will be excluded from the limited edition print offer. My remaining studio and private collection inventory contains hundreds of paintings that will be selectively reproduced and released as limited-series archival prints.

artistvenu will reproduce a controlled offering of 5 “Museum Quality Gallery Edition Archival Prints with hand signature” and a total of 24 “Archival Collectable Prints with embedded signature – which are at a more affordable price”. I’m excited to have an opportunity to share this inventory in the form of archival prints.

Q. How will this offering differ from the original work, and are you concerned that it will affect the valuation of your original acrylic on canvas paintings?

A. It is important to note that the limited edition archival prints are in a smaller size format than the originals. The maximum size of the Gallery Edition and Collectable Prints will be 17 x 22 inches including border compared to the original canvas and paper works. which are much larger scale in most cases, 24 x 24 inches or larger. Some of my canvas work exceeds 60 inches in size.

I believe that a quality-controlled limited quantity release will help increase the awareness and value of my original work and I’m looking forward to establishing a relationship with new collectors! I will only ever release limited edition archival prints selectively and at a smaller scale from the original canvas and paper works. This way, others can afford and enjoy collecting my work.

by Jay Zerbe

Only a limited number of select original paintings will ever be offered as a "Collectable" archival print from this artist's Portfolio inventory

Barriers Made of Concrete and Oyster Shells Mitigate Erosion and Offer Alluring New Habitats on Australia’s Coastline

Stretching across more than 160 miles of Victoria’s central coast, Port Phillip harbors a diverse marine ecosystem. In recent years, though, the Australian bay has experienced widespread development that’s damaged the vegetation protecting the land, leading to mass erosion and habitat destruction. At this rate, some of the current shoreline is predicted to be entirely underwater by 2100.

As a remedy, designer Alex Goad and the team at the Melbourne-based Reef Design Lab have created a series of conical modules that break waves and re-establish healthy ecosystems for aquatic life. Titled Erosion Mitigation Units and installed near the city of Greater Geelong, the two-meter-wide structures are made of concrete and recycled oyster shells layered into molds. Once removed and submerged in the water, the undulating, organic shapes offer small caves, tunnels, and hiding spaces for shellfish, octopus, sponges, coral, and other creatures. Overhangs provide resting spots for stingrays and globefish, and one-centimeter-wide ridges on the surface are designed to attract tube worms, mussels, and oysters.

Featured Image: Image © Alex Goad/Reef Design Lab

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Surreal “Incomplete” Portraits Capture the Evocative Spirit of Different People

When creating a portrait, Florian Nicolle looks beyond the physical appearance of his model and works to capture their spirit. His mixed media portraits often focus on a singular part of the face, asking viewers to examine certain features closely, while others fade into the background. The results are mysterious and dynamic illustrations that dive into the soul of each person.

Nicolle’s illustrations, which combine colored inks and pencil with digital enhancements, are a fresh take on traditional portraits. He spends a lot of time working for clients like Puma, Nike, and the NBA, creating sports illustrations. But his personal work and commissions show a different, more intimate side to the artist.

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Housing Projects: Architecture to Know

Housing estates are homes built together as a single development. Often called housing complexes, communities or subdivisions, these sites can consist of apartment blocks, detached, semi-detached houses, flats and tower blocks. Following WWII countries faced a need for a large number of affordable homes. This demand inspired architects to develop new ideas and practical solutions; and resulted in a growing number of residential areas in the second half of the 20th century. Some of these buildings have since become iconic such as Moshe Safdie’s Habitat 67 (1967) in Montreal, Ivor Smiths and Jack Lynn’s Park Hill Flats in Sheffield (1961), Neave Brown’s Alexandra Road Estate (1961) or Kate Macintosh’s Dawson’s Heights (1972) in London. Here we list five sites that serve as a record of architectural history.

Nakagin Capsule Tower, Tokyo Japan | 1972, Kisho Kurokawa

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Unfolded Origami Works by Sipho Mabona Reflect on Inevitable Transformations

In Transcending the Garden, Sipho Mabona continues to push the boundaries of origami through large-scale folds inspired by beastly and geological shapes. On view now at Glacier Garden Lucerne, this body of work evokes both animal physiques and the rigid, monumental nature of glaciers portrayed through monochromatic geometries.

Mabona became known for his animal sculptures ranging from small schools of koi to a life-sized interpretation of an elephant. In recent years, he’s shifted to more abstract, hand-dyed works on cotton that, rather than focusing on a three-dimensional figure, highlight the creasing process itself. The pieces appear unfolded and allow the viewer to envision what the final form could be if the sheet were re-constructed.

Image © Sipho Mabona

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A Show at the Louvre’s Satellite Space Brings Together Artistic Depictions of Mythical Creatures, From Lion-Headed Eagles to Unicorns

When the animal kingdom met the artistic imagination, the result was a whole zoo full of fantastical creatures from dragons to unicorns, phoenixes to sphinxes. These strange mythological beasts haven usually taken on symbolic significance, and reappeared time and again in art made by different cultures across time, as shown by an ambitious new survey of more than 250 objects opening this fall at the Louvre-Lens.

This wide-ranging, whistle-stop tour starts off in the Bronze Age. The oldest surviving fragments of cave art are proof enough that humans have long been driven to depict the wonders of the natural world, but it wasn’t long before we started taking a bit of creative license. One of the show’s earliest exhibits, a Mesopotamian seal cylinder that dates back to 3300–3000 B.C.E., features a lion-headed eagle.

Featured Image: Henry Fuseli, Thor fighting the serpent of Midgard (1790). Photo: © akg-images, Royal Academy of Arts, London.

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The Implications of AI-Generated Art and Copyright Law: A US Judge’s Ruling

A Recent Entrance to Paradise by Steven Thaler and/or Creativity Machine.

Recently, a US judge ruled on AI-generated art and stated that it does not qualify for copyright protection. Raising a crucial question about the relationship between artificial intelligence and creativity, the judge emphasized the importance of human involvement and the unique creative expression that comes from it and denied the artificially created image the status of original work of art.

The question of authorship’s attribution to works of art created by artificial intelligence (AI) is a complex and significant issue. Should the algorithm be solely attributed as the creator, or should the human designers be recognized as co-creators? This debate extends beyond legal boundaries and into the philosophical domain, where we must consider the implications of this new form of artistic expression. As we navigate this uncharted territory, we must balance the need for innovation with ethical concerns. It is essential to strike a delicate balance between respecting traditional copyright principles while embracing technological advancement, allowing AI systems and our artistic endeavors to coexist in a mutually beneficial way.

The dynamic between artificial intelligence and creativity will undoubtedly evolve over time. As we navigate this complex landscape, I am confident that true visionary art emerges from the depths of our imagination – something no algorithm can fully replicate.

While AI can certainly aid artists in generating ideas, refining techniques, and analyzing data, it is paramount not to lose sight of the unique perspective and creativity that can only be found within the human mind.

By harnessing AI as a tool rather than solely relying on it as a creator, we can benefit from its efficiency while still honoring traditional copyright principles. It means recognizing that, ultimately, humans are responsible for shaping artistic integrity and defining originality. Embracing these advancements should not replace or diminish the legal protections surrounding copyright ownership. But, they should instead inspire us to explore new ways to collaborate with technology while preserving our creative identity.

In this delicate balance between embracing technological advancements and respecting traditional copyright principles lies an opportunity for collective growth. It is through collaboration between human creativity and AI’s analytical capabilities that we can achieve new heights in artistic expression while maintaining respect for intellectual property rights.

However, some questions remain to be answered following this ruling:

What is your opinion on this Studio Drift topic? Have you played with AI to create some of your pieces already? We welcome the artistvenu community’s thoughts on AI Generated art .

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In Macro Photos, Barry Webb Captures the Fleeting, Otherworldly Characteristics of Slime Molds and Fungi

Craterium minutum. Image © Barry Webb

Photographer Barry Webb (previously) continues his hunt for the speckled, glimmering, and ice-crested organisms that pop up near his home in South Buckinghamshire, U.K. Armed with a 90-millimeter macro lens, Webb ventures into woodlands and other natural areas where slime molds and fungi thrive. There, he zeroes in on their microscopic features, documenting their wildly diverse characteristics that often last for just a brief moment in time. Recent shots include a tuft of Muppet-like fuzz topping Metatrichia floriformis, a water droplet suspended between two cup-like Craterium minutum, and a cluster of Pink stemonitis filaments propped on spindly black legs.

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