Celebrating open, sex positve, creative relationships with other people and ourselves.

I also really enjoy art & knitting.

Explore. Learn. Blossom.

 


Sean McGinnis

Working freelance at the dynamic and creative Casey Vidalenc Fashion House in Paris, he discovered string as a creative material, first sewing on clothes, then sewing on his own drawn and photographic work.  The strings ended-up flying off the support and began filling rooms.  And there, miles and miles of string and hours of labor going up and down ladders later, they form spheres, cones, intersecting wing shapes, or gothic arches, layers upon layers like three dimensional architectural drawings.  In mind-boggling intricacy, the straight lines of taut strings sculpt floating forms.  The thread is thin enough to not be easily seen, but the mass of repeated lines, though weightless and ephemeral, creates form.  The effect is heightened by moving around the various forms, letting their myriad of lines cross and recross in never repeating patterns.

(Source: cyanea)

I want to make terrariums, but I’m moving in a week, so I can’t (it’s easier to pack glass bowls than glass bowls full of growing, green things and dirt).  :P  

So, in the meantime, some very pretty succulents..

(Source: 8oaksterrariums)


Contemporary Textile Artist
Michiko Kawarabayashi
She combines traditional Japanese materials – mizuhiki, kaya – with more contemporary materials to create her architectonic, transparent, sculptural works, which are formed by her personal techniques. Movement, light, shadow and space, plus an acute material understanding are the central elements in her approach.

Contemporary Textile Artist

Michiko Kawarabayashi

She combines traditional Japanese materials – mizuhiki, kaya – with more contemporary materials to create her architectonic, transparent, sculptural works, which are formed by her personal techniques. Movement, light, shadow and space, plus an acute material understanding are the central elements in her approach.

(Source: shinyslingback)