At Toronto's Bayview subway station, shadows of common objects such as apples and ladders silk screened to the linoleum and walls framed by patches of colored tile gives the place a surreal look. Panya Clark Espinal is the artist who designed the art in the Bayview Station.
In this installation created for the Toronto Transit Commission, twenty-four hand-drawn images have been 'projected' onto the architecture of the station so that when seen from the original location of projection, the images are crystalized and realistic, but when seen from other locations they appear to be abstractions.
These images act as beacons, drawing the viewers along various paths of movement. Depicting everyday objects and simple geometric shapes, the images are rendered in an uncommonly large scale and in unusual orientations, allowing one to interact playfully with them as one moves through the space.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(114)
-
▼
October
(27)
- Creativeness in photography
- The Virgin Digital Find the 75 Bands Illusion
- Art with pumpkins carved to look like famous faces
- 3D Tatoos
- Funny Street Graffiti
- Bodies and Body Parts Seen from Google Earth
- Creative Construction Ad
- 3D Bed Sheets
- Waffer Art
- Surreal art
- Letter Art
- Subway Art
- Creative Art of Carlos Aires
- ArT of biscuits in korea
- Beautiful Baloon Art by Jason Hackenwerth
- Top Luxury Wooden Art Items
- Cool Oranges art
- Wall Paintings
- Farm Art
- Amazing Artwork on Eggs
- The Beautiful Works of Alberto Emiliano
- Lego’s World Heritage Edition
- Wonderful Hand Art
- Fantasy Art
- Vegetable Skill
- Cool Chocolate Art
- Optical illusions
-
▼
October
(27)
No comments:
Post a Comment