Coral and Plant Life Consume Discarded Objects in Post-Apocalyptic
4.9 (320) · $ 19.99 · In stock
Artist Stéphanie Kilgast (previously) envisions a vibrant, post-apocalyptic world overgrown with coral, fungi, and lush moss. Using cheap devices and disposable containers that tend to outlast their original function as her base, Kilgast creates painted-clay assemblages that are teeming with fantastical colors and texture: mushrooms sprout from an empty paint tube, sea creatures envelop a crushed can, and plant life cloaks a pair of headphones with whimsical botanicals. Each of the works contrasts the enduring manufactured object with natural growth, imagining a universe that’s simultaneously devoid of humanity and still marred by its rampant consumption habits. More
Tropical, Nature Taking Over a Tin Can Sculpture by Stephanie
In China, an Unseen and Dangerous Foe Takes Root: Lethal Fungi
Baleia feita com 5 toneladas de plástico é atração em cidade na Bélgica
310 Ican art ideas in 2024 art inspiration, art, sketch book
Launched in Detroit This Summer, A Black-Led Mural Festival Wants to Revitalize Neighborhoods with Public Art – 香港美術設計協會
Beach Waste Sculptures : beach waste
Threats to Coral Reefs
Stéphanie Kilgast (@PetitPlat) / X
Launched in Detroit This Summer, A Black-Led Mural Festival Wants to Revitalize Neighborhoods with Public Art – 香港美術設計協會
LadyWillow
The set of miniature corals, tiny coral for diorama or dollhouse
How to Sculpt a Coral Reef // Polymer Clay Sculptures
Stéphanie Kilgast (@PetitPlat) / X