Art and architecture blend into landscapes

Art and architecture blend into landscapes and nature

Different exhibitions around the world are capturing the symbiosis between art, architecture and nature. Landscapes that reflect where we are going and what we are. Thoughts about an uncertain future or a terrifying past.

The structural transformation of wood. Installation by Henrique Oliveira in the exhibition at the Tokyo Palace.

“Creation of a spectacular and invasive Gordian knot, Henrique Oliveira plays with the architecture of the Palace of Tokyo, which allows a work that combines the vegetable and the organic to emerge. The building itself becomes the belly that produces this volume of “tapumes” wood, a material used in Brazilian cities to build the wooden palisades that surround construction sites. "

The course of the river. Exhibition inside the Museum of Modern Art (Denmark) by the artist Olafur Eliasson that takes us into a rocky route along a river and its sinuous curves where invites you to explore nature and art.

«The transitions between the interior and the exterior, culture and the staging of nature, become a moving liquid, and the progress of the visitors through the museum becomes the central theme of the exhibition. Eliasson's exhibition wants to take us into a different way of looking at the museum, ourselves and the world. "

From the French visual artist Pier fabre at Sancy Horizons art and nature festival (Recommended to turn the page) in France. Installation "Dripping" is a work made up of around 300 bright red strings suspended in front of a waterfall at Egliseneuve d’Entraigues, in the mountainous Sancy region. Work created for design an unusual space on the water where the drops produced by the strings form a new volume.

Installation by ceramic artist Paul Cummins and set designer Tom Piper for the 100-year anniversary of the start of the First World War in a tower in London. Artwork Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red An outdoor installation that identifies 888,246 ceramic poppies representing the Allied victims of the First World War.

Installation by designer artist Bruce Munro who has laid out 600,000 CDS on the grass in a Wiltshire field in the UK. Based on the reuse and recyclingAs well as the voluntary contribution of CDS, an installation called CDSEA has been set up, forming a pattern, a path that winds around the lawn conceived as an inland sea that reflects the light of the sun and the moon.

This versatile artist has made endless installations, which are more spectacular. The following video shows us the workLight field, at the Holburne Museum, Bath.

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