Maya Hayuk Light Energy

 

A stunning large scale original artwork by artist Maya Hayuk. This is a large scale 165cm x 101cm and was commissioned for the The Solar Panel Art Series in New York 2018

 

A very unique and collectable piece-

 

Appox. 165cm x 101cm (64.96 x 39.37 x 1.57) in

  

Signed on verso

 

Delivery in London and possibly the Uk is available, please contact for details 

  

The Solar Panel Art Series aligns science and art, creating a platform where renewable energy meets artistic creativity. We invite a selection of artists and designers to employ solar panels as an artistic medium. The resulting bespoke artworks will be exhibited in Berlin and subsequently sold online in a benefit auction, with proceeds going to the Little Sun Foundation "Solar Kids School Program", a solar project that provides clear, safe and sustainable light and phone charging to school children and their teachers in Rwanda. These kids live beyond the energy grid and rely on dangerous, polluting and expensive kerosene or candles for their lighting.

The Solar Panel Art Series aims to raise awareness for renewable energy, now set to become the primary form of energy in the not-too-distant future. The project would like to highlight the potential where art, technology and nature can co-exist.

 

MAYA HAYUK

With their symmetrical compositions, intricate patterns, and lush colors, Maya Hayuks paintings and massively scaled murals recall views of outer space, traditional Ukrainian crafts, airbrushed manicures, and mandalas. Hayuk weaves visual information from her immediate surroundings into her elaborate abstractions, creating an engaging mix of referents from popular culture and advanced painting practices alike while connecting to the ongoing pursuit of psychedelic experience in visual form.
She has painted her iconic outdoor murals all over the world and, when not traveling, maintains an active studio in Brooklyn, sketching in paint to inform the large-scale works. She sees her studio painting practice and mural making as both inversely relational and symbiotic.