Nina Kintsurashvili
Tbilisi, Georgia
About the Artist
Nina Kintsurashvili's practice is characterized by her exploration of the intersection of technology, identity, and the body. Her works often involve the use of digital media, mixed materials, and installation, creating immersive environments that reflect the fluidity of digital spaces and the evolving nature of representation. Kintsurashvili's work is marked by a sense of experimentation and a keen interest in the social and political implications of technology.More Artists from Georgia
Gio Sumbadze
Sumbadze's works, often involving installation and mixed media, explore themes of urban life, social commentary, and the interplay between public and private spaces. His practice is marked by a critical and engaged approach.
Beso Uznadze
Uznadze's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of urban decay, memory, and the passage of time. His work is marked by a sense of raw materiality and poetic resonance.
Tamar Botchorishvili
Botchorishvili's works, often vibrant and expressive, explore the interplay of color and form. Her paintings and mixed media pieces reflect a deep engagement with contemporary abstraction.
Irakli Bugiani
Bugiani's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of urban life and social commentary. His work is marked by a raw and direct aesthetic.
Tamuna Chabashvili
Chabashvili's paintings, characterized by their dreamlike imagery and layered textures, explore themes of memory, perception, and the unconscious. Her work is marked by a sense of quiet mystery.
Salome Chigilashvili
Chigilashvili's works, often involving mixed media and installation, explore themes of identity, memory, and cultural heritage. Her practice blends personal narratives with broader social commentary.
Mamuka Japharidze
Japharidze's paintings, characterized by their vibrant colors and expressive brushstrokes, explore themes of cultural identity, memory, and belonging. His work is marked by a sense of emotional resonance.
Tamo Jugeli
Jugeli's works, often involving photography and installation, explore themes of perception, space, and the interplay between the natural and artificial. Her practice is marked by a subtle and contemplative approach.
Keti Kapanadze
Kapanadze's artistic practice, often involving sculpture and installation, explores the relationship between form, space, and materiality. Her work is characterized by a minimalist aesthetic and a focus on the essential qualities of her chosen materials.
More 3D artists
John Gerrard
John Gerrard is an Irish artist renowned for his captivating real-time 3D simulations. His computationally intensive works often depict desolate landscapes or industrial sites, exploring themes of power, energy, and environmental impact with a stark, unsettling beauty and a keen political edge.
Angela/rafael Detanico/lain
Angela and Rafael Detanico and Lain, as a collaborative duo (Detanico Lain), are Brazilian artists renowned for their conceptual work exploring time, language, and perception through technology. Their installations often use light, kinetics, and coded systems to transform data into poetic visual and sensory experiences.
Frank Benson
Frank Benson is an American sculptor known for his hyperrealistic figurative works, often rendered with a sleek, polished aesthetic. His practice frequently explores themes of identity, technology, and the contemporary body, capturing subjects with an uncanny precision that blurs the line between the real and the artificial.
Urs Fischer
Urs Fischer is a Swiss artist known for his boundary-pushing, often provocative sculptures and installations. His diverse practice employs various materials, from clay to melting wax, and explores themes of decay, transformation, and the ephemeral nature of existence with wit and conceptual rigor.
Matthew Ritchie
Matthew Ritchie (b. 1964) is a British artist whose expansive practice creates elaborate visual systems to map complex scientific and philosophical theories. His works, spanning painting, drawing, sculpture, and digital media, form intricate, interconnected networks that explore fundamental principles of information, time, and existence.
Josiane M.H. Pozi
Josiane M.H. Pozi (b. 1993, France) is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice explores the intersection of spirituality, identity, and the digital realm. Her work often incorporates performance and digital media to create immersive, contemplative experiences that challenge perceptions of presence and absence in contemporary society.
Mamali Shafahi
Shafahi's videos and installations explore themes of identity, technology, and the internet, creating satirical, visually dynamic works.
Evren Tekinoktay
Tekinoktay's digital and mixed-media works explore the intersection of technology, identity, and the body. Her practice engages with the fluidity of digital spaces and the evolving nature of representation.
Josh Kline
Kline's multimedia installations explore themes of labor, technology, and social inequality. His work often incorporates 3D-printed sculptures and video installations.
More Digital Art artists
John Gerrard
John Gerrard is an Irish artist renowned for his captivating real-time 3D simulations. His computationally intensive works often depict desolate landscapes or industrial sites, exploring themes of power, energy, and environmental impact with a stark, unsettling beauty and a keen political edge.
Ben Schumacher
Ben Schumacher is a Canadian artist known for his multidisciplinary conceptual practice spanning sculpture, painting, and digital media. His work often critically examines technology, information flow, and the commodification of art, using industrial materials and digital aesthetics to create complex, fragmented forms.
Francis Ruyter
Francis Ruyter is an American artist known for his vibrant, graphic paintings and installations that explore contemporary media and cultural representation. His work often features bold colors and simplified forms, translating photographic imagery into new visual languages that question authenticity and perception.
Rhys Coren
Rhys Coren is a British artist known for his vibrant, animated paintings and drawings that combine abstract forms with figuration. His work often features rhythmic patterns and a playful use of color, creating dynamic compositions that evoke music, movement, and the energy of contemporary culture.
Richard Hamilton Estate
The Richard Hamilton Estate manages the legacy of Richard Hamilton, a pioneering British Pop artist. He is renowned for his influential collages and paintings that dissected consumer culture, technology, and media, profoundly shaping Pop Art and challenging notions of art's role in a modern world.
Michael Craig-Martin
Michael Craig-Martin is an Irish artist, a pivotal figure in British conceptual art, known for his bold, graphic paintings and installations of everyday objects. His work employs a distinctive minimalist style and vibrant colors to explore the representation of objects, language, and perception.
Naoyuki Tsuji
Naoyuki Tsuji is a Japanese animation artist and filmmaker known for his unique, hand-drawn stop-motion and cutout animations. His distinctive style often features intricate details and fantastical narratives, creating dreamlike, often unsettling, worlds that explore folklore, myth, and subconscious landscapes.
Julian Opie
Julian Opie is a British artist known for his distinctive minimalist portraits, landscapes, and animations characterized by bold outlines and simplified forms. His iconic style captures the essence of his subjects through a reduction of detail, exploring perception, movement, and the modern urban experience.
Gordon Cheung
Gordon Cheung is a British artist known for his multimedia works that combine painting, collage, and digital media. His practice often uses financial newspaper pages as a ground, exploring themes of globalization, capitalism, and the digital age with intricate, often dystopian, visual narratives.