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Giant Murals Disappear With The Tides Because Nothing Lasts Forever

  • October 12, 2015
  • Los Angeles

After he completes a drawing, he hurries to find a place where he can sketch a finished piece; sometimes, he’s chased divided by a fast rising tide.

“Photography is unequivocally a second artwork,” he said. “I try to tell another story … sometimes usually focusing on a fact of a large drawing.”

It can take hours for a high waves to arise completely, so Dougados rarely stays behind to watch it erase his work. He will stay, however, if a waves demeanour good adequate to surf.

He infrequently wishes his work “lived a bit longer” so that he could share it with some-more people, but, he says, “it’s partial of a process, and we have another vacant board a subsequent day.”

Dougados intends to find some-more canvases around a universe where some-more people can knowledge his drawings and a healthy beauty that surrounds them.

“I try to constraint nature’s passing beauty,” he said. “[It’s] a geometry and communication that creates us stop and simulate on a sorcery of a moment, our attribute with nature, and a really hint of the beings.”

Scroll to see some-more of Sam Dougados’s strand design or revisit his website here

Article source: http://feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677530/s/4a9ac9dd/sc/27/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C10A0C0A90Csam0Edougados0Ebeach0Eart0In0I82796420Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Flos0Eangeles0Gir0FLos0KAngeles/story01.htm

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