Lightflowering - exhibition of graphic artist Marianna Nagy Lantos and glass artist Amala Gyögyér Varga

Lightflowering - exhibition of graphic artist Marianna Nagy Lantos and glass artist Amala Gyögyér Varga

Opening: Tuesday, July 13, 2021 at 6 p.m.
The exhibition will be opened by: Ildikó Fazekas, design and art manager.

It can be viewed until July 23, 2021, from Monday to Friday between 1 pm and 6 pm, with registration, exact date, no later than the day before the planned visit: iroda@fise.hu!

This year, Marianna Nagy Lantos earned the Distance Learning Diploma Course from the Society of Botanical Artists in England with high scores and a special prize. 17 botanical painters masters was teacher from all over the world. We can welcome Hungary's first internationally accredited botanical artist, which opens another door to the Botanical Section of Contemporary Art. The first results can be dated now, bringing the best drawing categories in the London Design Award, and 3 different Illustrations and Art Biennials with his works. He participates in many international works, but he wants to spread the Botanical Art widely in Hungary. In addition to his tasks in climate research, he focuses primarily on the conservation of protected species, the mapping of botanical gardens in Hungary, and the design of new plants. SBA assignments and award-winning works will be on display this year, concluding the student process, which continues in a new, exciting direction towards Contemporary Art.

Amala Gyöngyvér Varga glass artist’s creations are born out of a combination of conventional imaging techniques and digital technology. Her glass objects capture intuitive emotional imprints as well as the impressions and the afterimages of her inner journeys. Opposite mechanisms prevail on the transparent layer construction. The glass images combined with the mirror capture the light and cause a kind of internal vibration. The inner color dynamism of the objects installed in space is vitalized by free-flowing light. The exhibition partly shows a series of her works made during the period of the Kozma Lajos Scholarship for Applied Arts and Crafts, which she won both last year and this year.