California artist Tiffany Turner presented her works at the exhibition “What happened to us”, where flowers are the main element. Huge and even almost always massive flowers, such as dahlias, garden roses, buttercups and others, created from Italian crepe paper and reaching one and a half meters in size, convey the link between beauty and our imperfection, aging, but with a delicate device of soul beauty.

The main philosophy of the exhibition of the artist is that humanity uses a lot of chemical plastics, not environmental products, which harm not only the Earth, but also itself. She transmits not just global changes in society, she shows how a woman is experiencing aging in society. The obsession for perfection pushed Tiffany to create such an interesting exhibition.

The idea can remain an idea without its implementation, but by implementing the plan, you can see the search for the texture and center of thought, as the artist searched for and found. And the search was not just a form, of course one could just change the selected objects outwardly, but this does not add objects to this uniqueness. Therefore, Tiffany decided to create large flowers, but losing their luster and gloss in a natural way, showing that even fading, fading, but still remain beautiful and refined.
Everything that happens naturally in our life over time is impossible to change, but it is fashionable to rejoice and admire ourselves.

Her exhibition and sets and simultaneously answers the question: Why can not we just see more things beautiful?
The insert runs until June 15, 2019 at the Eleonora Harwood Gallery in San Francisco. For those who are passionate about making paper flowers, you can find her study book.
Get to know the world together! Every day it is multifaceted, great, and as long as we do not comprehend!
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