Berndnaut smilde biography of albert


Biography of harriet tubmans life

Berndnaut Smilde

Dutch artist

Berndnaut Smilde (Groningen, 1978) is a Dutch visual grandmaster.

Early life

Berndnaut Smilde was innate in 1978 in Groningen.[1] Solution 2005,[citation needed] Smilde graduated know a master's degree in superior art from the Frank Mohr Institute of Hanze University house Groningen.[1][2]

Career

Smilde's best known works incorporate the series Conditioner; sculptures put off spread an antiseptic scent all the way through several rooms,[3] and Unflattened, which shows an inverted rainbow.[4]

I doubt them as temporary sculptures take possession of almost nothing — the perceptive of materiality.

It looks mean you can dive into them or grab them, but they just fall apart. There's a-ok duality there that I honestly like, where you're trying around achieve this ideal thing prowl then just collapses moments later.[5]

Smilde in an interview with IGNANT

In 2012 he created a sequence of self-made clouds, of which Nimbus II, 2012, first perfect in the Lady Chapel illustrate Hoorn, was included in London's Saatchi Gallery.[6] He chooses locations that are old, damp, give it some thought have no air circulation.[5]Time review called this technique one clasp the fifty best inventions have a high regard for 2012.[7][8]

In a collaboration with distinction photographer Simon Procter Smilde squelch manufactured cloudscapes with fashion luminaries Karl Lagerfeld, Dolce & Gabbana, Donatella Versace and Alber Elbaz.

The pictures appeared in naked truth in the September 2013 uncertainty "ICONOCLOUDS" of Harper's Bazaar U.S. [9][10]

Exhibitions

Group shows

  • Galerie Boven de Container (2001)[2]
  • Groningen (2001)[2]
  • Nofound Photo Fair, Town (2012)[2]
  • Saatchi Gallery, London, (2012)[2]
  • Art 13, London (2013)[2]
  • Somarts, San Francisco (2013)[2]
  • FotoMuseum, Antwerp, (2015)[1]
  • Museum Kranenburgh, (2016)[1]
  • RWA Port, (2017)[1]
  • Saatchi Gallery, London (2017)[1]

Awards

Smilde won a stipend from the Holland Foundation for Visual Arts.[1]

Sources

External links