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  1. 2021年10月14日 · Chris Huen Sin-Kan on Instagram. Born in Hong Kong, artist Chris Huen Sin Kan earned a BA in Fine Arts at The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2013, before relocating to London with his family in 2021.

  2. 2017年4月14日 · Singapore-born, Eindhoven-based artist Qixuan Lim’s tiny sculptures blur the boundary between cute and creepy. See more miniature baby heads and sharp-toothed hearts below. Qixuan Lim’s Website. Qixuan Lim on Instagram. Via Creators.

  3. 2020年5月5日 · A selection of recent paintings by Barcelona-based artist Guim Tió (previously featured here). In her reflective essay, “Big Space, Little Person,” American author Lionel Shriver describes her adventurous 28 year-old self from the perspective of a now “far less inclined” 63 and, in doing so, perfectly pinpoints the strange ...

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  4. 2015年7月29日 · The installation was created by LAAB Architects using a highly sophisticated computer programming system that arranged all 262 laser-cut cells (of 22 unique shapes) into a formation that would allow for as little material and spatial consumption as possible. See more images of LAAB’s amazing design below! LAAB’s Website. Via designboom.

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  5. 2019年9月27日 · Toronto-based artist James Lee Chiahan has previously shared insights into his techniques, this time around he shares some of the thinking behind a new piece, “Into endless river” (Oil and pencil crayon on panel, 16″ x 16″, 2019).

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  6. 2016年1月19日 · Incredible Temple-like Portraits of Chinese Rock Musicians by Artist DU Kun. “Revels of the Rock Gods”, by Beijing-based painter DU Kun, is a series of epic oil paintings depicting the faces of Chinese rock musicians as mythic temples. His first solo show at the Mizuma Art Gallery in Tokyo runs until February 13th.

  7. 2013年5月15日 · 15.05.13 — Jeff. “Complex Pile” (of poop) by Paul McCarthy and other inflatable sculptures have appeared in Hong Kong as part of a great show called “Inflation!”. The works are scattered about the West Kowloon Cultural District as part of a series of events leading up to the eventual opening of M+, Hong Kong’s new museum in 2017.

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