“Psychogeographies” is a term for intuitively exploring cities and, now, a series of 3D collages by Brooklyn-based artist Dustin Yellin. The collages layer magazine clippings and acrylic paint on several sheets of glass, forming a 3D and life-sized abstraction of the human form. Standing six feet tall, the finished blocks of glass look like tanks for fictional science experiments. The human figures seem trapped inside, and one presses its hands against the glass. Made up of thousands of colorful scraps, the figures represent human anatomy with parts missing, ruptured, or disconnected. Altogether sinuous and strange, the “Psychogeographies” have the appearance of a culturally-charged, nth layer to the body.
The renovation of a 1978 house to create three apartments for several generations of the…
The well-known Schindelhauer minimalist design and high-end engineering, now packed in a series of lightweight,…
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A concrete, glass and wood house partly sunken into a hillside surrounded by pine forests…
A redesign project that creates the perfect synergy between antique details and contemporary elements. The…
A graceful chair that keeps lightness, sturdiness and comfort in an elegant balance. Designed by…
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