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Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wo

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

In the past, we saw different scenery and characters in the paintings within the frame. Now Japanese sculptor Keisuke Tanaka wants to refocus your eyes on the frame! "Can "Seeing the Scenery in a Picture Frame" should be the best annotation for his wood carving works.

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

Tanaka Keisuke uses discarded wood to carefully carve out the shapes of mountain trees, clouds, and water, and then paints them. Giving new life to the natural landscapes within the wooden frame seems to remind us where the wood comes from.

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

In addition to wooden frames and wooden pillars, Tanaka Keisuke recently tried to carve wood into a piece of cloth, using camphor wood and black ink to complete the new work "Next Cloth". Appearance looks like clothIts soft and thin, and even the crumpled creases are real and original. From a distance, its hard to believe that its carved from wood!

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

Carve the scenery into the wooden picture frame and challenge the limits of your understanding of wood

It looks like a natural vitality, but it hides traces of man-made buildings