Description
What if you could project your emotions for the world to see, tweaking, twisting, and turning dials like a DJ to elicit the perfect response from others? For experimental artist "The Little Sunday Boy," all things in life connect through the intricate dance of technology and emotion. Inspired by James Turrell and Dan Flavin, his collection "Metallic Atoms" uses a bespoke visual scripting interface that he fine-tunes like a synthesizer: each color, word, and shape assigned a value that corresponds to an emotion. Changing the emotion results in an altered shape, texture, and color, creating geometric forms and bold metallic hues. Each piece in "Metallic Atoms" offers a captivating visual rhythm that simulates the complexity of modern life, and the ever-changing emotions that accompany it.
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“The Little Sunday Boy,” born in Korea, majored in fashion at New York's Fashion Institute of Technology (F.I.T.). While there, he found himself exposed to experimental artists such James Turrell and Dan Flavin that pushed the limits on what art could do or be- and found the experience similar to the challenges and survival aspects of life abroad.
Upon returning home, The Little Sunday Boy developed an interest in 3D graphic work, which allowed him to transcend the limitations of time and space. He now creates conceptual paintings that bridge digital and physical art using 3D graphics. His work explores the importance of technology in modern society and the complexity of the microscopic world, expressed through a visual rhythm of texture and color using 3D digital materials, such as his “Atom” series.
Currently, The Little Sunday Boy works in the field of 3D clothing simulation and is expanding his scope to include both digital and physical art, continually researching texture and media expression.