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With a stark color palette and very succinct explanations, artist Tadao Cern’s work is both minimal and complex, using black balloons, helium, and metal frames to create works of art. His clever use of helium to float balloons within metal boxes is fascinating, and gives his work a sense of magic and precision. Β His installations start simple, with two balloons, and quickly multiply, until the stark white room is filled with a fleet of hundreds, beautifully arranged in perfect rows.

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For an extensive amount of time I had an idea to connect two balloons. I found a free minute between the other currently run projects, bought two balloons, and got overwhelmed by the result.

It was so unpretentious and so magical at the same time! That opposition created by two very simple and playful objects once again brought a unique childlike sense of discovery.Β This experience uncovers a lot and the more one looks at it, the more it becomes true: “simplicity is genius”.

For the first test I only used two balloons and two different gasses: helium and sulfur hexafluoride – the light and the heavy ones. Later on I worked out how to make the balloons float in the middle of a glass tank without connecting them to anything.


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The metal frame holds a row of perfectly straight balloons
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Impressive room height allow these balloons to be showcased in a dramatic grid fashion
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Cern has a range of frames to allow for impressive scale for his installations
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A full room’s worth of balloons look excellent in rows
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Cern even plays with enormous balloon shapes, which give a more ominous feel to the art
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A fascinating minimal series of work

We all know that digital renderings are impressive these days. Go to any decent science-fiction movie, and the CGI has progressed to a point that you hardly notice what is a digital effect and what is real life anymore. Well, the following images push that limit even further. All of the below are digital renderings, not photographs. They are mind-blowingly true-to-life, and yes, these digital artists spent way too much time making them so. Make certain to click on the images and see them up close. Wow.Β Via Gizmodo:
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Artist:Β Marcin Gruszczyk

Garden

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Artist:Β Marek Denko

Southern Ground Hornbill

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Artist:Β Leandre Hounnake

Calm Before

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Artist:Β David Lesperance

Ornaments

Artist:Β Jan Kristian Volmer

It’s Going To Rain

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Artist:Β Denis Lebedev

Raspberry Day

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Artist:Β Andrey Kobushenko

Old Typewriter

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Artist:Β Marcelo Souza

Defringe has a cool look at the work of Moneyless, who does abstract sculptures using rope. In our modern world of 3D rendering, the physical ropes often look superimposed on the scene.

Moneyless creates the next level of what the Spanish La Pluma ElΓ©ctri*k street art crew calls Spider Tags: Two and three dimensional abstract installations made of cotton threads combined with geometrical paintings. The results are often impressing, especially when the installations look like wafting through the air. Moneyless is based in Straussburg, Germany.

By Moneyless

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Via Colossal, some excellent colored thread installations from Texas artist Gabriel Dawe.
Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Colored Thread Installations by Gabriel Dawe thread installation color

Dallas-based artistΒ Gabriel DaweΒ (previouslyΒ hereΒ andΒ here) creates colorful site-specific installations using bright gradients of suspended thread. Above is a small selection of his work over the past year as part of hisΒ PlexusΒ series. Despite the geometric precision in each installation, it’s fascinating to see how some works become sort of amorphous clouds of floating color, and I’m sure seeing these on a computer screen hardly compares to seeing them up close. See much more on hisΒ website.