SUBTL AMERICA

nycartscene:

Opens Sat, May 19, 7-9p:”Luminosity in the Dark Rift” Doze GreenJonathan LeVine Gallery, 529 W20th St., NYC (9th Floor)a series of mixed media works on canvas, panel and paper. Green’s signature aesthetic combines figurative abstraction, organic cubism, fluid line work and stylized letterforms. Using an array of mediums with an intuitive, stream-of-consciousness creative process, the artist’s skillful approach involves rich layers of overlapping elements, intricately woven into tapestry-like compositions.  - thru June 16 View Larger

nycartscene:

Opens Sat, May 19, 7-9p:

Luminosity in the Dark Rift
 Doze Green

Jonathan LeVine Gallery, 529 W20th St., NYC (9th Floor)

a series of mixed media works on canvas, panel and paper. Green’s signature aesthetic combines figurative abstraction, organic cubism, fluid line work and stylized letterforms. Using an array of mediums with an intuitive, stream-of-consciousness creative process, the artist’s skillful approach involves rich layers of overlapping elements, intricately woven into tapestry-like compositions.  - thru June 16


sfmoma:


Ever since R. Buckminster Fuller popularized the design in the mid-20th century, there’s been something captivating about the geodesic dome. While the structure typically makes architecture lovers salivate, now it’s conquering the heart of another type of urbanist: the city farmer. A new dome-based prototype promises an affordable method of rooftop aquaculture for apartment and commercial buildings—as the website calls it, getting “fish from the sky.” 

(via A Geodesic Dome Promises Fish from the Sky - GOOD)

sfmoma:

Ever since R. Buckminster Fuller popularized the design in the mid-20th century, there’s been something captivating about the geodesic dome. While the structure typically makes architecture lovers salivate, now it’s conquering the heart of another type of urbanist: the city farmer. A new dome-based prototype promises an affordable method of rooftop aquaculture for apartment and commercial buildings—as the website calls it, getting “fish from the sky.”

(via A Geodesic Dome Promises Fish from the Sky - GOOD)