The 21 sculptures exhibited at the Missouri Botanical Garden in "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybycozo" are meant to be seen both by day and by night. This work, "Point of View," is shown in the daytime.
Photo courtesy of Hybycozo
The 21 works at the Missouri Botanical Garden's exhibition "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybocozo" are meant to be seen both by day and by night. Here is "Point of View" as seen at night.
Yelena Filipchuk and Serge Beaulieu are the artists behind Hybycozo, which makes geometric-shaped sculptures that appear solid by day but produce lacy shadows at night.
"Axis Mundi," an 18-foot-tall geometric sculpture is based on the structure of a carbon molecule. Created by Hybycozo, it will be displayed at the Missouri Botanical Garden from April 10 to Sept. 26.
Up to six people can step inside "Insight," one piece in the Missouri Botanical Garden's exhibition "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybycozo," which will run April 10-Sept. 26.
St. Louisians drove to Missouri Botanical Garden to view the return of the Garden's Orchid Show on Sunday, Jan. 29, 2023. The show returns for the first time since 2020 and is located in the Jack C. Taylor Visitor Center's Emerson Conservatory. Video by Jordan Opp, jopp@post-dispatch.com
The 21 sculptures exhibited at the Missouri Botanical Garden in "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybycozo" are meant to be seen both by day and by night. This work, "Point of View," is shown in the daytime.
The 21 works at the Missouri Botanical Garden's exhibition "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybocozo" are meant to be seen both by day and by night. Here is "Point of View" as seen at night.
Yelena Filipchuk and Serge Beaulieu are the artists behind Hybycozo, which makes geometric-shaped sculptures that appear solid by day but produce lacy shadows at night.
Up to six people can step inside "Insight," one piece in the Missouri Botanical Garden's exhibition "Patterns in Nature: The Art of Hybycozo," which will run April 10-Sept. 26.
"Axis Mundi," an 18-foot-tall geometric sculpture is based on the structure of a carbon molecule. Created by Hybycozo, it will be displayed at the Missouri Botanical Garden from April 10 to Sept. 26.