Many are familiar with the iconic, surreal world of the Catalan artist Joan Miró, in which the stylistic traits of Fauvism, Cubism and Dadaism are intertwined in a remarkable way. The artist’s colorful, symbolic, and playful yet serious visual style now comes to life on 3D compositions.
Russian illustrator and graphic designer Alina Druzhaeva created 3D works inspired by the richness of Miró’s graphic expression. Instead of using canvas, brushes, and paint, Miró’s signature characters are transformed into three-dimensional figures via digital tools.
Alina Druzhaeva | Behance
Source: abduzeedo
more to read
sustainability
Peeling is appealing | Recycling with Marcelina Komar
Polish designer Marcelina Komar creates new, functional design objects from the inedible parts of vegetables and fruits. This is The_peel Project, a collection of objects made of biowaste!
“It only depends on our routine and habits when an item is seen as waste. The best thing is that our
architecture
Katyń Museum | Warsaw, Poland
Katyń Museum located beneath the Warsaw Citadel is the fruit of a special collaboration: its concept was conceived by artists, historians and landscape architects. In this week’s PACE X HYPEANDHYPER episode, we look into the results of this exciting project.
Katyń Museum tells the story of the mass murders
architecture
House on a slope | Kruk Rasztawicki Architekci
Instead of leveling the ground, Polish architects’ studio Kruk Rasztawicki decided that it’s time that a building embraces the terrain it occupies.
This family house in Gdańsk is an architectural paragon of adaptation: it adapts to the sloping terrain it was built on and follows the needs of its