Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

On View: Dust’s “Organic” at Hugo 45

German street artist Dust paints a world where human beings are irrelevant — instead, ancient-looking tree trunks with ragged branches sprawl out and expand, seemingly becoming animated as they grow freely without obstruction. Dust has a solo show on view at Hugo 45 in Braunschweig, Germany titled "Organic." For the show, Dust completed two murals, one inside and the other outside the gallery, and presented 40 new paintings and sculptures. "Organic" is on view through July 21. Take a look at some photos of the murals and artwork after the jump.

German street artist Dust paints a world where human beings are irrelevant — instead, ancient-looking tree trunks with ragged branches sprawl out and expand, seemingly becoming animated as they grow freely without obstruction. Dust has a solo show on view at Hugo 45 in Braunschweig, Germany titled “Organic.” For the show, Dust completed two murals, one inside and the other outside the gallery, and presented 40 new paintings and sculptures. “Organic” is on view through July 21. Take a look at some photos of the murals and artwork below.

Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Once scheduled to be on view at the Smithsonian's National Portrait gallery, Amy Sherald's American Sublime is now on view at the Baltimore Museum of Art after the artist pulled the exhibit, asserting that she could not 'comply with a culture of censorship" Read the full article on the exhibition from our recent issue, after it premiered at the SFMOMA by clicking above!
Painter Laura Ball's hypnotically engaging paintings give the viewer a multi-planed insight to the roiling energy of the subconscious, as well as the dynamics of the equally vital and tempestuous physical world. Read the full article by Kirsten Anderson by clicking above.
The hues in Cowan's work are distinct, matched and paired among disparate findings from various locales. Read Andy Smith's full article on this unique glass artist by clicking above...
Cinta Vidal’s intricate paintings often foster favorable comparisons to graphic prints by M.C. Escher, especially the latter’s impossible constructions. Any similarity is largely incidental: Where Escher revealed the subtle harmonies that unite the incongruent, Vidal reaches for something more intimate and human. Read the full article by clicking above!

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List