Kokopellic // Courtney Hoskins // Large Abstract Art Giclee Print Black, Blue, Silver, Abstract Print, Abstract Art Print, Metal Print

from $1,100.00

Normally one doesn't put aluminum foil in the microwave- but Slightly-Mad Scientist Courtney Hoskins has the curiosity of a cat and the eye of an artist, and we're glad it all worked out in this stunning micrograph of the aftermath. Presented as a big 36x36” inkjet print on- what else- aluminum panel with a high gloss finish.

Limited Edition #2 of 10 on aluminum, signed certificate on back, ready to hang. Different sizes available- contact us for info.


Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese ?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.
Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/

Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.

Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

http://courtneyhoskins.com/

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/

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Normally one doesn't put aluminum foil in the microwave- but Slightly-Mad Scientist Courtney Hoskins has the curiosity of a cat and the eye of an artist, and we're glad it all worked out in this stunning micrograph of the aftermath. Presented as a big 36x36” inkjet print on- what else- aluminum panel with a high gloss finish.

Limited Edition #2 of 10 on aluminum, signed certificate on back, ready to hang. Different sizes available- contact us for info.


Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese ?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.
Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/

Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.

Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

http://courtneyhoskins.com/

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/

Normally one doesn't put aluminum foil in the microwave- but Slightly-Mad Scientist Courtney Hoskins has the curiosity of a cat and the eye of an artist, and we're glad it all worked out in this stunning micrograph of the aftermath. Presented as a big 36x36” inkjet print on- what else- aluminum panel with a high gloss finish.

Limited Edition #2 of 10 on aluminum, signed certificate on back, ready to hang. Different sizes available- contact us for info.


Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese ?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.
Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/

Roswell, New Mexico or Chuck E. Cheese?

Who knew such mysterious and terrifying creatures lurked deep within the unfathomable world of your kitchen cupboard. No, that wasn't a rhetorical question, and the answer is Courtney Hoskins. Her startling and surreal photographs look like scenes from science fiction movies, or space probe satellite images from NASA, yet the objects she uses in her work were found around the house, heated to temperatures equal to that of the surface of a strike-anywhere match and photographed through a polarizing filter.

Hoskins taps into an aleatoric universe through the use of one of the most powerful supercomputers on the planet: her mind, and has mastered the software application used by every creative genius that ever lived: Imagination. Many people have put cellophane and plastic cutlery in a toaster oven, but all they did was ruin their dinner and set off the fire alarm. When Courtney Hoskins does it, aleatoric art is served.

http://courtneyhoskins.com/

https://www.thedice.co/Art/COURTNEY-HOSKINS/