Fruits and chocolates are used by artist Adam Hillman to create his works of art.
Adam Hillman, an American artist,
creates intricately detailed patterns out of everyday objects and foodstuffs.
Sliced bananas, apples, oranges, cookies, and chocolate are occasionally used.
Paper clips typically clutter
drawers, but Adam Hillman uses them, along with coins, toothpicks, edible
ingredients, and other items, to create visually striking, visually soothing,
and colorful designs. Hillman refers to himself as an "Object
Arranger."
Can these objects be used to create a
work of art? Can you arrange these to make an interesting pattern or image to
tell a story? Adam Hillman, a multimedia artist, does exactly that.
His Arrangement series, in which he
arranges everyday objects in geometric and repetitive patterns, is his most
well-known work. He began his artistic career as a painter. Later, he developed an interest in
smartphone photography.
"I started organizing everyday things
I found around my house to make my photos more interesting," says Hillman.






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