Shifting Perceptions
Olafur Eliasson connects art, architecture, installation and design, dismantling the presence of physical and cultural barriers in the process.
Olafur Eliasson connects art, architecture, installation and design, dismantling the presence of physical and cultural barriers in the process.
Sing-Sing is an award-winning duo that work together on everything from design to film, creating projects for the likes of Lyft and Sagmeister & Walsh.
Kris Provoost is a Belgian-born photographer, currently designing and documenting buildings in order to better understand the world.
A self-taught filmmaker and photographer, Glashier works exclusively on film, capturing narrative images and producing documentaries and music videos.
Contemporary Chinese artists demonstrate a consideration of censorship in the wider industry, offering figurative and metaphorical messages.
A self-taught 3D artist, Alexis Christodoulou has spent years building a collection of works that focuses on the creation of imaginary architecture.
Louis MacLean has a keen eye for detail, taking away the formal function of landscapes and reinjecting dynamism through a considered perspective.
A new fashion label redresses the notion of femininity with clean lines and workwear staples as well as a worldview that extends to social activism.
Incorporating a filmic sense of drama in his works, Alessio Albi uses wildlife to embed anonymous figures within a highly textured landscape.
Emerging brands Gayeon Lee and Matter Matters address the rising levels of consumption with bespoke garments inspired by wider culture.
Influenced by humanity’s fascination with the nature of the everyday, Romain Veillon’s photographs inhabit a world of testimony and nostalgia.
Sisters Sally Ann and Emily May Gunawan return to Aesthetica with a shoot inspired by the Australian landscape and Pacific Ocean.
Considering the broad scale of materials available today, a collection of innovative projects delves into the wider potential of 21st century production.
Continuing an ongoing support of emerging talent, Next Generation is an annual collaboration with LCC that celebrates the work of graduates.
Computer-aided designs break the material-making mould, steering the creation of increasingly responsible, adaptable and sustainable architecture.
Kevin Krautgartner’s works focus on geometric elements from the evolving landscape, revelling in bold structures set against an immaculate skyline.
Using patterns and data from intelligent surveillance systems, Esther Hovers’ images have been crafted around the detection of criminal behaviour.
Brooke DiDonato creates rich, palpable images that document a new kind of reality – taking figures from the realms of the everyday into a state of flux.
Photographs of the country’s interior and exterior structures provide thought-provoking insights into a society built upon fairyland aesthetics.