Omni preview
Thursday, November 18th, 2010KAMI and SASU (HITOTZUKI) putting the finishing touches on their debut Australian exhibition at Backwoods opening tomorrow.
KAMI and SASU (HITOTZUKI) putting the finishing touches on their debut Australian exhibition at Backwoods opening tomorrow.
Tokyo’s king and queen of art, Kami and Sasu with son Kai in the process of painting their latest mural in Melbourne Australia, leading up to this weeks launch of “OMNI”, their latest exhibition at Backwoods Gallery.
Tokyo street art originators are currently in town preparing for thier debut Australian show OMNI launching next Friday at Backwoods.
They’re painting the Melbourne central wall, should be completed tomorrow.
New Print by TwoOne on Nice.
Giclee Print on acid free 300gsm archival paper signed and numbered out of an edition of 20.
Talented young Tabaimo creates animated works that are as beautifully crafted and aesthetically appealing as they are enigmatic, fascinating, and often quite disturbing. Not content to simply construct beautiful or intriguing images, she clearly aims to offer a complex and pessimistic vision of Japanese society at the start of the new millennium.
http://int.kateigaho.com/oct03/anime-tabaimo.html
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYL-9A5SZag[/youtube]
I having poping up every where last 2 month.
2nd Duo show with Thomas Jackson At Lo-Fi Collective Gallery in Sydney.
series of Giclee prints of new water color drawings. and more..
Please come down If your in Sydney!
Also here is few photos from “Absence of man” also an Duo show with Thomas Jackson at China heights.
I will do Proper post about this show soon..
New video by Kami and Sasu who will be in Melbourne during November for a show at Backwoods.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1BGIrKR6EM&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
Stunning Tokyo time-lapse video by Samuel Cockedey that shatters the perception of individualism in the context of a great city, with ambient electronica by Paul Frankland, aka Woob.
[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/14692378[/vimeo]
An interesting interview with Samuel on the process behind his time-lapse work can be found here.
Along with Tomoyuki Washio, Takayuki Ina is really at the forefront of the illustration scene in Nagoya.
He doesn’t have much of a web presence ( http://funkizm.net/ ) but his live painting sessions are hour long meditations and explorations into playfully abstract worlds.
He has also participated in quite a few fashion and music collabos, aswell as regular exhibitions throughout Japan and recently the U.S.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_aO5qIisPY&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
Cognitive Dissident.