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But then the Surrey NanoSystems website announced all future artistic applications of Vantablack would be reserved exclusively for Anish Kapoor, stating: “We have… chosen to license Vantablack S-VIS ...
People Anish Kapoor Owns the Rights to the Blackest Color Ever Made. So Another Artist Made His Own Superblack—and Now It’s Even Blacker. Anyone is allowed to use Stuart Semple's new Black 3.0 ...
But we will at last see the sculptures Anish Kapoor has made using the “world’s blackest black” in this expansive two-venue retrospective.
Sculptor Anish Kapoor is embracing Vantablack, the newly-invented blackest black ever, and plans to incorporate the substance into his artistic practice, reports the BBC. Vantablack was invented ...
Oh, and Semple’s “black 2.0” smells of black cherries, a shot at the fact that Vantablack supposedly has a horrible chemical oder about it. “This is not the blackest black in the world ...
Anish Kapoor should keep his hands off of it. Don’t let the whitest white paint be like Vantablack. ... As any goth who has spent the day on the beach knows, black absorbs light and will heat up.
At last, it’s time for the black magic show, also known as the ‘Vantablack’, ‘Anish Kapoor black’, or ‘blackest black’ works (or in popular culture wars, the subject of a longstanding, vitriolic stand ...
Taking advantage of his exclusive rights to make artistic use of the high-tech, light-absorbing material Vantablack, the British artist Anish Kapoor has covered the entire surface of his Chicago ...
It's not a paint or a pigment. It's not even really black. But the "material" known as Vantablack is causing a stir after renowned sculptor Anish Kapoor bought exclusive rights to use it in art.
Anish Kapoor is stirring the (paint) pot once again. The British artist's staunch hold on the world's blackest pigment, Vantablack, has irritated the art world and incited an all-out color war ...
Vantablack is the blackest black in existence, a substance developed for industrial use by the company Surrey NanoSystems. Designed to absorb 99.965 percent of visible light, it’s so black that ...
Imagine you’re in preschool. Crayolas are your jam. You’re coloring up a storm. You reach for the black crayon to add some dark squiggles to your abstract expressionist masterpiece, and this other kid ...
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