Using a process that could be the new definition of meticulous, Korean sculptor Seung Mo Park
creates giant ephemeral portraits by cutting layer after layer of wire
mesh. Each work begins with a photograph which is superimposed over
layers of wire with a projector, then using a subtractive technique Park
slowly snips away areas of mesh. Each piece is several inches thick as
each plane that forms the final image is spaced a few finger widths
apart, giving the portraits a certain depth and dimensionality that’s
hard to convey in a photograph, but this video on YouTube shows it pretty well. Park just exhibited this month at Blank Space Gallery in New York as part of his latest series Maya (meaning “illusion” in Sanskrit). You can see much more at West Collects. (art news, west collects, lavinia tribiani)
In a scene from TOWN with Nicholas Crane, Patrick Stewart, of Star Trek and X-men fame, gets nostalgic over his childhood and recites a poem in his native Yorkshire dialect. His mother and aunt would recite the poem around Christmas time every year which is probably why he still remembers it many years later. Stewart was born in Mirfield - a small town in West Yorkshire England.
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