Japanese artist Tomoko Shioyasu was born in Osaka in 1981 and majored in sculpture at the Kyoto City University of Arts. Her immense floor-to-ceiling tapestries are meticulously cut by hand from enormous sheets of paper using utility knives and soldering irons. Her work evokes some of nature’s most complex creations: the organic patterns of cells, the flow of water, and the forces of wind. How these are hung without tearing seems nearly impossible.
Related Posts :
Incredible art by Amy Genser. She used rolled pieces of paper ...
Nathalie Boutté creates paper collages using thousands of str ...
Designers Nikki Salk and Amy Flurry collaborate together as p ...
UK-based Jennifer Collier crafts these impeccably detailed de ...

Cool Decoration for Drinks
The Funny War Betwen Android and Apple
How people Kiss Differently Around The World
Creative Faucet Stand for iPhone and iPad
Water Stone Faucet
Renaissance style Portraits of Celebrities
Pencil Sculptures by Dalton J. Paul Getty
Pencil and Real World Picture
Floating Country invested by Paypal founder Peter Thiel
How Origami Cranes Help raised 2 Million Dollars





















Dirty People Using Dirty Tricks in Corporate World
Cool Dinosaur in Glass Bottle
Cool Water Painting of Birds
Big and Environmental Friendly Modern Structures
Cool Reconfigured and Disfigured Sculptures
House with Many Shapes
Picture in Cut Leaves