This is a mosaic artwork that was presented at the exhibition Sheikh Zayed and Europe: A journey at the prestigious Sheikh Zayed Mausoleum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Aljaž Vidrajz studied architecture, and soon realised that he needed more creativity and more hands-on work. After finishing the Scuola Mosaicisti del Friuli in Spilimbergo in Italy, one of the most respected schools of mosaic, he produced a replica of a Roman mosaic. He installed it on his kitchen wall. From replicas to mosaic interpretation of photographies and paintings, mosaic tables and house numbers to artworks of contemporary mosaic, Aljaž creates the power of the message piece by piece, tessera after tessera. In his work he develops the play of shadows, reflections, textures and colours. The result is an image that urges the observer to see it as a whole and at the same time invites to peer at the details and mosaic structures. "Mosaic is a technique that does not know shortcuts and requires time," says Aljaž, who puts at least one special tessera in every mosaic composition he makes.
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This is a mosaic artwork that was presented at the exhibition Sheikh Zayed and Europe: A journey at the prestigious Sheikh Zayed Mausoleum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Photo: ©All rights reserved
In this artwork, desert rose crystal, sand from the Liwa desert and locally collected materials are combined with traditional mosaic materials. Three-dimensional surfaces are flowing through the piece at different levels, building soft lines, symbolising the rhythm of desert dunes and the ever changing textures drowned by desert wind.
Photo: ©All rights reserved
In this artwork, desert rose crystal, sand from the Liwa desert and locally collected materials are combined with traditional mosaic materials. Three-dimensional surfaces are flowing through the piece at different levels, building soft lines.
Photo: ©All rights reserved
The Heart of the Desert was created during the World’s Largest Artist Residency (2019), the first event of its kind in Saudi Arabia, in parallel with the King Abdulaziz Camel Festival.
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Takeoff is a composition of 200 pieces, each measuring 10 cm x 10 cm. They are made from found objects: the remains of various types of marble, glass from the beach, hardened clumps of tar, metal, shingles of ceramics. As this modular piece gradually loses segments, Aljaž Vidrajz replaces parts with new unique creations. In this way, Takeoff is perpetually being organically transformed. Its original message remains as encouragement towards a better tomorrow.