Tag: Public Art

From Badong to Chongming: Multi-Site Ethnography as Method and the Making of Sonic and Visual Tapestries โ€” A Review of Pepper Indulging (Neo Gao)

In Pepper Indulging โ€” Alluvial Voice, Neo Jiapu Gao turns a vast geopolitical story into something intimate and quietly unsettling. By spending two days and one night with the Zhang familyโ€”first-generation migrants relocated after the Three Gorges Projectโ€”Gao captures moments that feel almost ordinary: harvesting peppercorns, tending a garden, preparing for sleep. Yet beneath these scenes runs a deeper current of displacement, language barriers, and lingering memory. Through layered imagery, shifting dialects, and the persistent presence of a Sichuan pepper plant carried from their former home, Gao reveals how migration reshapes not only landscapes but the textures of everyday life. What begins as a portrait of a single family slowly unfolds into a meditation on what it means to be uprootedโ€”and what fragments of home can survive the journey.

The Glowing Cathedral: Where Bacteria, Invisible Ink and Light Become Scripture

Said Dokins and Leonardo Luna, Memory Heliographs, Mexico City

Step inside a centuries-old church where the walls glow, breathe, and transform before your eyes. In Inscriptions, Mexican artist Said Dokins turns sacred architecture into a living laboratory, blending invisible ink, bioluminescent pigments, and colonies of bacteria to question how memory, power, and presence are written into the urban landscape. Each pieceโ€”whether a luminous photograph traced in darkness or a petri dish of living microorganismsโ€”invites viewers to witness writing as a biological and political act. In this fusion of art, science, and resistance, the cityโ€™s erased histories pulse back to life beneath the light.

Anastasia Egonyanโ€™s Visual Dichotomies: Personal Figures, Impersonal Cities

As a photographer, Egonyan is drawn to two visual extremes: depersonalized, human-free views of large capitalist metropolises, and nude figures frozen in poignant, semiotically rich poses. The interplay between these contrasting visual strategies within a single artistic context beautifully illustrates the originality and professionalism of her creative vision.

Does Mark Zuckerberg’s Statue of His Wife Alienate the Asian Community?

Mark Zuckerberg, the co-founder and CEO of Meta, is no stranger to public scrutiny. His latest public endeavor, a statue of his wife Priscilla Chan, has sparked a wave of discussion that transcends mere artistic critique. The 7-foot-tall sculpture, unveiled on Zuckerberg’s Instagram account to his 14.6 million followers, has been met with a mixture of bewilderment and criticism, particularly from within the Asian community. The choice of design and execution has led to concerns that the artwork unintentionally reinforces harmful stereotypes, portraying Chan in a manner that aligns more closely with an alien being than with the classical beauty and reverence traditionally associated with statues of loved ones.

Unleashing Creativity: Exclusive Interview with Greg Mike on Art, Inspiration, and Success

Greg Mike is a contemporary artist known for his signature characters, bold street art, mural paintings, and the Loudmouf icon that blends colorful designs with pop culture. His iconic characters exude energy and movement, inspiring viewers to feel a sense of nostalgia and happiness. Greg has painted murals in cities such as Atlanta, Miami, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and even the Swiss Alps. His studio work is exhibited in galleries and museums around the world. Some of his notable clients include Nike, Coca-Cola, Facebook, Google, Spotify, BMW, and the Atlanta Braves. Greg has also collaborated with artists like DeadMau5, NGHTMRE, and Big Gigantic. Additionally, Greg Mikeโ€™s work has been collected by celebrities such as Justin Bieber, Diplo, Scooter Braun, Swizz Beats, and Nina Dobrev. In this interview, he shares insights into his creative process and inspirations.

‘The Fabric of Bell’ an Art Collection by npz studio+ and Sebastien Courty at Bell Works in Holmdel, NJ Honors its Profound and Special History

Paola Zamudio of npz studio+ wanted to elevate the arts to new heights in celebration of the iconic Bell Works to honor the buildingโ€™s rich history of innovation, so as the Lead Designer and Creative Director of Bell Works, she brought on friend and New York-based artist, Sebastien Courty for an unforgettable project. Amazed by the buildingโ€™s grandeur and stylistic architecture, they were soon commissioned thereafter by Ralph Zucker, in honor of Jozef and Jonathan Straus, to create The Fabric of Bell, a subcollection from the in-house art collection of Totem, A Wallโ€™s Jewelry. Inspired and commemorating the historic original Bell Labs, which was previously a research facility and awarded eight Nobel prizes during its tenure, the project was an innate expression and tribute to Eero Saarinen, the architect of the lavish Bell Works building.

JDL Unveils 40-Metre Mural ‘Icarus’ in Rome to Raise Awareness for Environment

Judith de Leeuw (JDL) – a well-known Dutch street artist who’s art appeared all over the world – has unveiled her imposing new 40-metre mural entitled “Icarus”, created for the Street Art for Rights Forum Festival on the north-east wall of the Corviale building in Rome, the famous “Serpentone”, one of the “most symbolic” walls in the capital.ย 

This new masterpiece – on one of the city’s largest walls – bears a reference to the myth of Icarus. Icarus is the man who, heedless of his own limitations, flew too close to the sun with wax wings and fell into the sea. A metaphor for a profit-blinded society that is heading for self-destruction, aiming to have the most today, heedless of the future.ย 

‘STREET ART FOR RIGHTS’ Concludes in Rome

In Rome, 17 murals dedicated to the UN 2030 Agenda spread the culture of sustainability through street art.

The recently completed last wall by the well-known street artist Fabio Petani officially concludes the 3rd edition of Street Art for Rights in Rome, the festival that narrates and spreads the culture of sustainability through street art, in the sign of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the UN Agenda.

Street Art for Rights has established itself as a reference point for street art in Italy with over 30 works realized in Rome in the suburbs of Corviale and Settecamini and in Lazio between Cassino, Fiumicino and Latina. A true open-air museum that offers all fans and not, especially during the Christmas holidays, to get to know a ‘New Rome’ unprecedented and little known.