Images courtesy the artist. The artist behind the body painting, Emma Hack , currently has several current and upcoming exhibitions of her work, including Chinoiserie , a show that opens August 25th at The Cat Street Gallery in Hong Kong. For this exhibition, Hack uses as her jumping off point the tradition of chinoiserie , the 18th century European practice of interpreting and imitating Chinese and other East Asian artistic traditions for decorative arts, fashion, architecture and garden design, amongst other arts. The subjects of her series of body paintings are designed to look like porcelain busts standing in front of similarly patterned canvas backgrounds, photographed in lush fashion by Hack. Vibrant, surreal and mysterious, the works find Hack creatively interpreting the interpretations of chinoiserie, and exploring the conceptual territory of opposites.
The art of self love body painting is abstract, emotional and You've heard of artists painting nude people but Emma Hack goes one step further by actually covering them in colour and blending them into the background See a hot girl get hypnotized to see her friend butt naked!
Living on the verge of art, body paint has always been a provocative trait characteristic of either indigenous cultures or the fashion world. As time goes by, body painting is becoming increasingly popular and used in various commercial and mainstream activities. The art of body painting has diversified so much, as to have its own sub-categories, ranging over traditional body painting, fashion body painting, fine body painting and even graffiti on body. The shared trait of all body painting styles is that they use body as canvas, emphasizing the transforming potential of the human skin. Body painting has been around for centuries, typical for various cultures of Pacific islands, Australia, New Zealand and Africa.