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Sponsored by [Noom]( Big, bold ideas. Future changemakers. Thrilling recommendations. This is the Sunday read youâll find nowhere else. Jun 26, 2022 Sunday From glass shards and flower petals to pigments from desert soil, the artists featured in todayâs Sunday Magazine hail from around the world but share a common thread: They incorporate surprising media into works that are as profound as they are eye-catching. Often their art tells an intimate story or offers commentary, both personal and political. In every case these artists have wowed us in the ways they have expanded what art can be. Today, meet some of the bold creatives that the world is only just getting to know. â with reporting by Priyanka Sacheti from Bangalore, India [Donât Wait To Lose Weight]( [Noom]( Most diets are about cutting things out, preventing you from eating and doing what you really want. [Noom]( is different, because they donât want your diet to feel like a punishment. Noom takes a psychology-based approach to help understand yourself and the decisions you make, so you can make changes that are both positive and sustainable. Their program comes with daily psych-based lessons, guided coaching, and group accountability to keep you on track as you make your way through your new healthy lifestyle so you can learn tools to forgive, practice, and stick to the plan. Theyâll help you create a new routine that is doesnât starve you or stress you out, so youâll see lasting results. You can start making progress in your mental health, fitness, nutrition, and overall wellness right now â just take [Noomâs]( easy 5-minute quiz to get going. [Take The Quiz]( Art is a statement Victoria Villasana A Mexican textile, installation and street artist working with embroidery and vintage photographs, Villasana uses her countryâs textile traditions to infuse new life into images by [overlaying them with vivid handmade tapestries](. Her work features female visionaries from history, pop culture and social causes prominently, while her threaded handiwork converts each two-dimensional image into a three-dimensional presence. [Villasanaâs rendering of Virginia Woolf]( brings to mind the writerâs words: âFor most of history, Anonymous was a woman.â Villasanaâs work honors them. For more, follow Villasana on Instagram. Ashima Raizada Itâs all in the mind. This Indian photographerâs images can appear [mirage-like when affixed on leaves](, or stand out in mixed-media work that incorporates needles, clay, crayons and a fake diamond. In other work she explores the idea of the self becoming a â[sacred space](â during turbulent times. She portrays the fragile terrain of interiority with strands of hair, rose petals, stones and a [photograph of an eye](, compelling the viewer to examine objects individually and within a broader context. For more, follow Raizada on Instagram. Laetitia Ky Womenâs bodies are political, and as a Black woman, this artist from Ivory Coast has claimed the politics of her hair to craft powerful sculptures. She is both the story and storyteller in her works made of her own hair, in sculptures that range from the playful â as in the [bird perched upon her arm]( â to the courageous narration of the [violation of her body](. Ky has recently authored a book, â[Love and Justice](,â in which she chronicles her journey as an artist and activist. For more, follow Ky on Instagram. Soils, flowers in lieu of paint James Brunt Whether using a fallen carpet of [pink rhododendron flowers to make spirals]( or combing the beach to [create pebble mandalas](, this British artist uses natureâs diverse gifts to develop stunning geometric patterns. Natureâs offerings are also his inspiration. His art captures the planetâs changing seasons and rhythms. In poet Mary Oliverâs words, if âattention is the beginning of devotion,â Bruntâs work comes from the pulsating place where attention and devotion meet. For more, follow Brunt on Instagram. Medina Trevathan The henna gardens of this Pakistani-American artist sinuously migrate from palm to paper and fabric, as images of [pomegranates]( and flowers come to life through natural dye and thread. The application of henna on a personâs body bestows upon them âthe gift of new insight,â she told OZY. âTheir hands and feet, their most sacred tools to navigate this earth, suddenly appear as living pieces of art which are carried in awe throughout the day.â Her own journey with henna began just three years ago; today her aspiration is for her work to reflect the centuries-old history of henna patterns, which have traveled around the world and played distinct roles in different cultures. She seeks to ârecreate the art that adorned the bodies of the people before us.â For more, follow Trevathan on Instagram. Stella Maria Baer Stella Maria Baerâs paintings are vivid with the colors of the New Mexico desert â quite literally, as she creates pigments from the desertâs soil. A dotted swatch of color can evoke the concept of a dynamic, deconstructed desert: an exploration of what she describes as the âalchemy of dirt into pigment.â She has demonstrated the rich variation in [pigment hues]( even when collected from the same location. And her silvery [lunar meditations]( pose questions worth answering. WATCH TAKASHI MURAKAMI on [The Carlos Watson Show](! They create universes Anuradha Bhaumick A [pink trumpet tree in full bloom]( in Bangaloreâs popular Cubbon Park appears like a billowing cloud in embroidery artist Anuradha Bhaumickâs work. Repurposed from scraps of her motherâs old clothing, and with astonishingly precise needlepoint, Bhaumick conjures tiny, detailed universes in vibrant color. Now Bhaumick is taking her vision global. In a new project, Comfort Collages, she will create works from fabric gifted to her by artists and friends around the globe, all of them to portray scenes of [happy solitude](. Sometimes an individualâs joy is a collective gift. For more, follow Bhaumick on Instagram. Amber Cowan Her colored glass dioramas are intricate studies in narrative detail that pay homage to an historic American craft: [glass sculpting](. Cowan largely uses glass cullet sourced from flea markets, antique stores and scrap yards, whose junk comes from defunct factories. Cowan told OZY she is âmining the history of objectsâ and their original color, which she uses to âanimateâ her pieces. She says that, at times, certain people and animals become recurring characters in her work, which explore themes ranging from the divine feminine to finding symbolism in the mundane. For more, follow Cowan on Instagram. Masayo Fukuda Kirie, the Japanese art of paper cutting, dates back to the 7th century. Masayo Fukuda of Tokyo is among the leading contemporary artists reinvigorating the tradition, with her wildly intricate creations drawn from nature. An initial paper sketch can become a [multi-limbed octopus]( or a [swimming nautilus](. Over the course of three decades practicing this craft, Fukuda has learned to use a scalpel to gradually cut and shape paper into vivid alternate realities. While a glimpse of the finished art is testimony enough, [the videos Fukuda creates]( demonstrate that her process is a work of art, too. For more, follow Fukuda on Instagram. Meredith Woolnough The Newcastle, Australia-based visual artistâs sculptural embroidery maps the structures of natureâs diverse veining systems. Her marriage of intricate freehand embroidery and soluble materials creates brightly colored [coral fans](, flowers and leaves, sponges and shells, which compel observers to consider the patterns binding us to one another. For more, follow Woolnough on Instagram. Community Corner What artist, musician or writer would you like to see featured in OZY? Share your thoughts with us at OzyCommunity@Ozy.com. ABOUT OZY OZY is a diverse, global and forward-looking media and entertainment company focused on âthe New and the Next.â OZY creates space for fresh perspectives, and offers new takes on everything from news and culture to technology, business, learning and entertainment. [www.ozy.com]( / #OZY Curiosity. Enthusiasm. Action. Thatâs OZY!
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