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Entertainment

Featured Works From The Gallery: Week 32

Each week we bring you our favorite projects from the Gallery, showcasing the best of what The Creators Project community has to offer.

Our new online Gallery provides creative professionals a platform to showcase their portfolio of work, gain exposure, build their network, find collaborators, and become eligible for funding opportunities like The Studio. The Gallery also helps fans of cutting edge creative work to discover new artists and inspiring projects. Each week we’ll be selecting a few of our favorites and bringing you the best of what The Creators Project community has to offer. To have your work featured, submit your tech-powered projects to the Gallery.

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Philippe Safire: Sun Child

Philippe Safire’s fascination with the digital pixel is brought to life in his video installation Sun Child. The artwork composes several different videos inside a warm-colored halo, forming a metaphor between a child’s spontaneity and the sun. The project reflects each stage of the sun’s cycle and is best displayed on a huge surface in hopes of basking the viewer with its sunshine.

Peter Nowacki: Hide & Seek

For those of you who remember playing hide and seek growing up, Peter Nowacki‘s short movie brings us right back, except this time to a creepy setting that could be straight out of a horror movie. Using software, like Autodesk Maya/Mudbox and Adobe AfterEffects/Premiere, the video was modeled and rendered to commemorate the long-lost childhood memory. Nowacki added eerie sounds and circus freaks that appear so frighteningly realistic, you’ll feel as though you’re in a nightmarish version of the beloved game we all cherish and miss.

Pedro Joel Costa: The Rachel Raymond House

The recently demolished Rachel Raymond House was originally designed by pioneering architect Eleanor Raymond in 1931 and re-visioned by Pedro Joel Costa as an “invisible” building with all mirrored surfaces. Using his modernist’s eye for order, Costa took this classic piece of architecture and turned it into possibly the coolest house we’ve ever seen. The wide spaces and innovative design literally reflect contemporary culture and housing needs, leaving us hope for the future of living space.