Italian Architect s 1st Asia Solo Exhibit Debuts in Shenzhen thatsmags.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thatsmags.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Leandro Erlich s great void to come to Shenzhen By Lin Qi | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2021-07-16 10:27 Share Leandro Erlich s
Swimming Pool on show at the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, in 2014. [Photo/Courtesy of 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa]
When Argentine artist Leandro Erlich s solo exhibition The Confines of the Great Void came to the art museum of Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in the summer of 2019, it took the city by storm by attracting more than 160,000 visitors in 45 days.
The mind-blogging, widely-acclaimed show will open at the Sea World Culture and Art Center in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, on July 31.
Studio 10 divides up Fashioned from Nature exhibition with translucent corridors
Chinese design firm Studio 10 has used translucent materials and winding ramps to create a series of abstract spaces to display artefacts at the Fashioned from Nature exhibition at the V&A s outpost in Shenzhen.
Top: Exhibition design by Studio 10. Above: backlit fabrics look to create an impression of foliage
The entirely new exhibition design divides the show into two sections.
The first section details the relationship between fashion and nature since the 16th century and has a design that references classical gardens.
Named Fashioned from Nature in China: Then and Now, the second part of the exhibition examines a similar theme but with a focus on China and takes a more contemporary design approach.
Throwback Thursday: As WeChat Turns 10, We Remember the Time It Became a Literal Work of Art Jan 21, 2021 11:30 am | Add a comment | 178 reads
Throwback Thursday takes a look back into Beijing s past, using our 12-year-strong blog archives as the source for a glance at the weird and wonderful stories of Beijing s days gone by.
On a cold winter morning 10 years ago today, Tencent unveiled its newest project, a humble little messaging app called
Weixin. Though the company was already firmly planted in the social media sphere with its QQ instant messenger app and Qzone social network, the idea behind
Weixin was to disrupt the telecommunications ecosystem by creating a service that wasn’t constrained to a single mobile phone model or service provider. Simply put, with this new technology, users would have more freedom to send text messages, short voice memos, and photos to their friends and family. As folks are wont to say, however