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Hi-Fructose Issue 73 is Coming. Here Is a Sneak Peek.

This issue features a plethora of issue exclusive articles, printed on fine art papers, HF 73 features a cover feature on Chet Zar, Amy Sherald’s American Sublime, the cardboard installations of NONAMEY, surrealistic painter Benjamin Spiers, the glitch filled landscapes of Alexis Mata, Marylou Faure’s brightly colored world, the deeply personal work of painter Celine Ducrot, the imaginative sculpted creatures of Brett Douglas Hunter, and a 16 page Special Insert Section on the work of outsider artist Stephane Blanquet. Plus a review of the new monograph of punk photographer Murray Bowles!

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When French designer Emmanuelle Moureaux first arrived in Tokyo, she became fully fascinated by the colors overflowing on the street. She found that the city's overwhelming number of store signs, flying electrical cables, and flashes of blue sky framed by various volumes of buildings created three dimensional "layers". The flood of various colors that pervade the city streets are mirrored in her design installations, which build up a complex depth and intensity of space. These experiences of colors and layers are in the inspiration of Moureaux's latest project, "bunshi" (meaning "ramification"), which means to divide or spread out into branches- a rainbow-colored suspended forest made on 20,000 pieces of paper shaped like twigs in 100 shades of color.
Interested in the intersection between tech and architecture, interdisciplinary design studio Loop.pH (composed of Mathias Gmachl and Rachel Wingfield) creates interactive, site-specific installations that allow the public to engage with budding technologies and scientific concepts in novel ways. One of their latest works, "Atmeture," was on view at the Letchworth Fire & Fright Festival, which took place on October 28 through November 6 in Letchworth, UK. "Atmeture" invited viewers to walk through an illuminated, porous tunnel in which fibers inflated and deflated with a breath-like motion. Though a bright, visual spectacle on the outside, the breathing work of art fostered a calming, meditative space in its interior.
Chaim Machlev is a Berlin-based tattoo artist originally from Israel whose captivating, geometric designs resemble the spiked images of cardiographs. Machlev works intimately with clients one-on-one in his private workshop where he creates custom designs suited to each person's body. Though his work appears somewhat digitized, he says he draws out each image entirely freehand before making it permanent. The lines and curves of each piece respond to the unique shape of each individual. As a result, Machlev never inks the same design twice.
Hi-Fructose 76 is Coming. Click Above to see sneak peeks from the next print issue.

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