Posted by Ruxandra on May 29, 2011 · 1 Comment
Kaija Poijula’s is one of those artists whose work causes an instantaneous poetical collision. When I bumped into her “Fortuna” one year ago – and later into “Sleeping beauties” at the Helsinki design museum, I really got fascinated by her virtuoso use of airy and frail dandelions trapped in an elaborate glass and polished wooden structure. … Continue reading →
Filed under conceptual art, contemporary art, culture, design, exhibitions, Finland, Finnish design, Helsinki, Ireland, Scandinavian design, textile art · Tagged with angels' swings, Ateneum, Bethlehem, boats, Celtic folklore, Cheongju International Craft Biennale, christ church cathedral, clear water temple, collaborative art, contemporary art, crowdsourced art, culture, Didrichsen museum, dublin, elegy, Ennis, espoo, fortuna, galleria Johan S, gallery norsu, galway, Harju funeral chapel, herttoniemi church, Hugo Simberg, installation, Ireland, juha leiviskä, kaija poijula, kiyomizu-dera, kulosaari church, kyoto, lahti, little buddha, mikkeli, pagan symbols, Palestinian cultural centre, performance, plenty of time, religious art, saatchi gallery, sea and ocean collection, sempre fideles, suomen mielenterveysseura, textile, textile art, venice biennale, villa lepola