High Five: works of art, which can only be seen from above

Worldwide artists create works that open up up to the viewer, the farther he is away from you. Beaches, snow-covered landscapes, grain fields or flat roofs use the artists as a canvas.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Footprints in the Sand artist Andy Coutanche creating ephemeral images

    Britain’s Andy Coutanche, the island of Jersey is working with a simple rake. The beaches are its ephemeral canvases, which you can recognize but only from above. In his home country, he has earned the nickname “Sandman”. Sometimes, the flood devours the images prior to their completion.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Signature XXL

    The German artist Luzius Ziermann is survived by his signature only at chosen places. And you can recognize it only from the bird’s perspective. There are countless discarded car mirror that he has set here in the Arena of the Italian city of Verona to his characters. His first Installation, he left in the desert of Namibia. It was even possible to see in the world.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    The dove in the Cornfield

    Creative everyone can be, whenever he has an idea. Also a farmer in Italy. Dario Gambarin uses the time between sowing and harvest, in order to turn his field into a work of art. With his tractor, “malt”, he portraits and images into the Cornfield, as of 2013, this dove of peace on the occasion of the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Smiley with DJ in the knit sweater

    British photographer Joseph Ford makes his Models blend with the Background. For his project “Knitted Camouflage” has he worked with the knitter Nina Dodd. You used the same colors as the planned Background. For this Super-Smiley, she has designed a XXL Sweater for the British musician Fatboy Slim.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Ice-cold Geometry for this work, the artist stepped through the snow

    Briton Simon Beck spends the Winter in the French Alps. There, he operates his very own winter sports: He trudges with his snow-shoes through the landscape – specifically. Beck leaves behind geometric forms, which he photographed then and in the Social media. Some of his works are as large as three football fields.

    Author: Meike Krüger


  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Footprints in the Sand artist Andy Coutanche creating ephemeral images

    Britain’s Andy Coutanche, the island of Jersey is working with a simple rake. The beaches are its ephemeral canvases, which you can recognize but only from above. In his home country, he has earned the nickname “Sandman”. Sometimes, the flood devours the images prior to their completion.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Signature XXL

    The German artist Luzius Ziermann is survived by his signature only at chosen places. And you can recognize it only from the bird’s perspective. There are countless discarded car mirror that he has set here in the Arena of the Italian city of Verona to his characters. His first Installation, he left in the desert of Namibia. It was even possible to see in the world.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    The dove in the Cornfield

    Creative everyone can be, whenever he has an idea. Also a farmer in Italy. Dario Gambarin uses the time between sowing and harvest, in order to turn his field into a work of art. With his tractor, “malt”, he portraits and images into the Cornfield, as of 2013, this dove of peace on the occasion of the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Smiley with DJ in the knit sweater

    British photographer Joseph Ford makes his Models blend with the Background. For his project “Knitted Camouflage” has he worked with the knitter Nina Dodd. You used the same colors as the planned Background. For this Super-Smiley, she has designed a XXL Sweater for the British musician Fatboy Slim.

  • High Five: European artists whose works you recognize, if you look at it from above

    Ice-cold Geometry for this work, the artist stepped through the snow

    Briton Simon Beck spends the Winter in the French Alps. There, he operates his very own winter sports: He trudges with his snow-shoes through the landscape – specifically. Beck leaves behind geometric forms, which he photographed then and in the Social media. Some of his works are as large as three football fields.

    Author: Meike Krüger


There are works of art that fit in a Studio and break the mold. And who wants to really look at in its full beauty, the must high.

Not a new phenomenon

The artists ask the viewers a radically different angle. An invention of our time, however, this is not. The view from the top draws the humanity for a long time in the spell. Some of the art works were created in times in which there were neither aeroplanes nor balloons. Until today, you give up the scientists.

No one knows exactly how the Nasca-Indians these animal figures are created

How did, for example, the Nazca Indians in Peru more than two thousand years, to conjure up with huge lines of animal figures in the landscape? The smallest animal illustrations are a ten, the largest being several hundred feet tall.

Tracks in snow and Sand

The artists reveal how they create their works astound us. Some use for your works the easiest. You left tracks in the deep snow by simply walking on it. Or are you raking on the beach, figures in the Sand. They all have one thing in common. Your plants are huge and some are seen even in space.


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