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Staff in starbucks coffee saw I was sketching so they as me if I would do it for them on paper cup. That was really fun to draw on a curve surface ! The idea was to sketch what we can see from the coffee shop when looking outside.
I did a shoot with Rainn Wilson's Soulpancake.com. yep, Dwight from The Office.
this is le result after 2 days of continuous drawing. see the video here:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVjFyFnK3N8
for more my life, everyday in 2d for the past 6 years and counting: www.iamboey.com
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The 3 cups are now ready ! I just finished the 'Venti' large size last Wednesday. The staff is happy about it and the manager told me they put a picture of it into their intern magazine. Some of the cups has been drawn just for fun like the one with yellow and purple colors and the other one with the array of coffee beans.
There couldn't have been a superior name for an organization, Advanced Fertility and Surrogacy Centre Lajpat Nagar the best IVF focus in Delhi that has conveyed a lifetime of happiness to thousands of families over the world.
Advanced Fertility and Surrogacy Centre Lajpat Nagar , Latin for bliss, has introduced new period of moderate and successful IVF facility in Delhi, India, rising as the favored goal for patients looking for fertility mind they can trust. A main Government-endorsed IVF focus with 9 best in class focuses crosswise over North India, Advanced Fertility IVF focus consolidates advanced regenerative innovation with world-class clinical skill to bring you tweaked fertility arrangements that work. Every patient who strolls into a Advanced Fertilityoffice is treated with most extreme empathy and regard and gets customized consideration from a devoted group of specialists.
Today there are more than 8500 Advanced Fertility babies everywhere throughout the world — a reverberating assertion of unparalleled achievement of Advanced FertilityIVF focus which has presented to us various honors and respects along and uncommon worldwide praise.
At Advanced Fertility and Surrogacy Centre Lajpat Nagar, we regard your dream as our own and work energetically to enable you to have a sound child to bring home. We give the best surrogacy administrations and IVF treatment to barren individuals at our IVF center. We are resolved to offer our patients the best IVF treatment at moderate cost.
A prepared Obstetrician and Gynecologist with over a time of involvement in IVF barrenness management, Best Infertility Specialist in Delhi Dr. Kaberi Banerjee is famous fruitlessness and IVF authority in Delhi and NCR. Dr. Banerjee is the Medical Director of Advance Fertility and Gynecological Center, New Delhi and has dealt with more than 5000 pregnancy cases up until now. Her skill lies in effectively dealing with confused instances of rehashed IVF disappointments, giver, and surrogacy.
A Qualified Professional
Dr. Kaberi Banerjee Gynecologist is barrenness and IVF Specialist, prepared from the renowned Guys and St. Thomas Hospital, London, where she went as a Commonwealth researcher and has put in three years in London (UK) doing thorough preparing in the space of barrenness and IVF. She finished her MBBS and MD in Obstetrics and Gynecology from the esteemed All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi. She has done her participation from the Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (MRCOG), London and is additionally an individual from the National Academy of Medical Sciences (MNAMS). She is effectively engaged with composing articles and sections in the worldwide diaries, logical distributions, and introductions for the IVF site and has been showing at a few International Conferences as a welcomed staff.
She has acted as a Senior IVF Specialist in major corporate hospitals in Delhi and is the sorting out administrator of CUPART (Current Practices and Recent Advances in ART), an International association meant to encourage the correct treatment and research in richness and IVF. The establishment was established in the year 2011 by Dr. Kaberi Banerjee.
A dynamic member in this field, an enthusiastic author, and an exhaustive expert, Dr. Kaberi Banerjee has gotten numerous eminent national honors, incorporating IMA grant in IVF in 2007 and Bharat Jyoti Award in 2008, for outstanding commitment in prescription and the lofty India Excellence Award in Medicine in 2015.
Professional Certifications
Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists, London
American Society of Reproductive Medicine (Member)
National Academy of Medical Sciences (NAMS), India
Relationship of Obstericians and Gynecologists of Delhi (AOGD)
Alliance of Obsterics and Gynecology Societies of India (FOGSI)
Indian Society of Perinatology and Reproductive Biology
National Association of Reproductive and Child Health of India
AIIMSONIANS (The AIIMS Alma mater)
IVF & Infertility Treatment
Infertility is characterized as a couple's powerlessness to imagine following one year of unprotected intercourse. Infertility is seen as a social issue in our nation, with different restorative indications.
Infertility influences 15% of couples worldwide or one of every six couples all inclusive. As of now, the quantity of fruitless couples stands at 60-80 million, and the number is expanding each year.
In India, upwards of 20% of couples look for treatment for this issue. Medicinal purposes behind the inability to imagine could be available in both of the accomplices. In our nation, issues of infertility are seen in 35-40% of men, and an equivalent level of ladies, while, the two accomplices confront the issue in 20-30% of cases.
Be that as it may, progresses in restorative science have made it workable for fruitless couples to encounter the delights of parenthood. Since the introduction of Louise Brown on 25th July 1978, more than 3 million unnaturally conceived children have been conceived, illuminating their folks' lives.
Infertility influences one of every six couple. There are around 60-80 million barren couples worldwide and the rate is expanding. A few patients precipitously accomplish pregnancy however others at some stage encounter trouble in accomplishing origination and these patients require some sort of help with getting pregnant. There is around 3-5% likelihood of accomplishing pregnancy in one menstrual cycle this is called Fecundability, fertility is the likelihood that a solitary cycle will bring about a live birth. It is evaluated that out 100 couple with female accomplice's age under 35 years, approx 80-85% will accomplish pregnancy inside the principal year of unprotected intercourse, 90% will imagine inside year and a half and around 95% will consider inside two years. The rest of the 5% once in a while accomplish pregnancy without some type of help.
Infertility might be characterized as a powerlessness to accomplish pregnancy inside 2 years of having unprotected intercourse, however a few clinicians incline toward this time utmost to be 1year. Ladies who are over 35 years ought to counsel a specialist following a half year of prophylactic free sex when it has not brought about pregnancy. This distinction in as far as possible is attributable to the declining egg quality with expanding age. In a few couples the fertility is hindered to some degree however not totally, these patients may consider in third year or accordingly with no help as there is a postpone these patients are called sub ripe. While, sterility is a flat out condition of failure to imagine.
The reason for infertility could be in both of the accomplices (Male factor-35%, Female factor-40%) or in 10-15% the two accomplices might be barren or sub rich. some of the time each could be separately fruitful however as a couple may require help to accomplish pregnancy the causes could be immunological or hereditary, this is called Combined infertility. While in around 10%, the fertility assessment demonstrate no variation from the norm, these patients are probably going to have issues which are not analyzed by current accessible examinations, this is named unexplained infertility.
IUI
Intrauterine Insemination alludes to the strategy of insemination at the season of ovulation. This aides in expanding the odds of origination far beyond the normal course. It is shown in instances of gentle issues in sperm check/motility, dysovulation, mellow endometriosis, unexplained infertility and in instances of benefactor sperm.
IVF
In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) is a procedure in which eggs are treated by sperms outside the womb (uterus). In layman terms, it implies an 'unnaturally conceived child'. IVF enables numerous childless couples to accomplish parenthood. It is shown in instances of tubal square, male infertility, extreme endometriosis, unexplained infertility, past fizzled IUI cycles, egg gift and surrogacy, and so on.
ICSI
ICSI is a method that is utilized alongside IVF. In this strategy a solitary sperm is specifically infused into an egg
Surgical Procedure
Fertility improving Laparoscopy and Hysteroscopy is shown for expulsion of ovarian pimple, fibroid, polyp, tubal redress, septum resection, adhesiolysis, division of intrauterine synechiae, and so forth.
Treatment for Male Infertility
Contingent upon the reason, either medicinal or surgical treatment can be embraced. In instances of Azoospermia, surgical sperm recovery took after by IVF-ICSI can be attempted.
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The 200ml paper cup was used to create the wind chime, but alas, the surface was just plain off-white in color and some charm was missing. Yesterday, during Vinayagar Chathurthi, used sketch pens and drew the surface with some art.
After painting, took 4 shots of the surface and used Photoshop to transform the 3D imagery into 2D layout.
The top row is the four photographs (candid snaps), while the bottom is a singular image that had been stitched using Photoshop!
Sincere thanks to Parthiban T of PSM for teaching some basics in photo-editing using Photoshop that enabled me to play around with these images.
Cup of the Day #27
Census Cup
By Gwyneth Leech 2010
Colored India ink
on white and beige printed paper coffee cup
During the NYC Pool art fair in March, held at the Gershwin Hotel on East 27th Street, visitors were invited to sit on my bed and draw pictures on the theme of family. Over the course of three days 160 people took part and the drawings were hung in the bathroom, eventually filling the walls from floor to ceiling, including inside the (dry) shower stall. 150 of the drawings are now on my website. Click here to view.
The Movable Studio will be making another appearance in a picnic variation at Figment New York, the arts festival held on Governors Island in New York Harbor June 11th, 12th and 13th. Visitors are invited to join me on the grass of Nolan Park where the studio will be spread out on picnic blankets from 11AM to 5 PM. Nolan Park was home to officer's families and the beautiful clapboard houses still stand beneath shade trees around a village green. Come imagine what family life was like here and draw your version.
Coffee is available on Governor's Island at Pyramid Café next to pier 101, but all things considered you might prefer to bring your favorite brew in a thermos.
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup of the Day #26
Green Palm by Gwyneth Leech, 2010
Colored India ink on white paper coffee cup
I was walking home from the studio in the pouring rain the other day and passed one of my local deli-men. He was carrying an umbrella and wearing a black and white satchel over his shoulder - a 2010 Census satchel! He has embarked on a new, temporary career going door to door chasing up non-responders.
I was in his shoes at the beginning of April, although it wasn't door-to-door then, but a matter of waiting outside soup kitchens and shelters for the intensive shelter-based enumeration at the start of the census period. We trained at Truro college in Lower Manhattan - hundreds of us all at once, spending long days in windowless rooms going methodically through handbooks. This was not a job to be taken lightly, even though our crew leader, Lisa Kaplan, a stand-up comedienne by profession, did her dry best to make it palatable. At the training our group of 30 or so included under-employed singers, actors, writers and artists, some of whom I already knew from around my neighborhood or from my choral singing job.
Lunch breaks were a highlight of the training and Bean and Bean, at 71 Broadway, a pleasant discovery. They are an all-organic coffee bar and roast their beans right on the spot. You can see the Digital Roaster, the Pro 2500, sitting in shiny glory in a glass-walled room at the back of the shop. It made me feel quite confident about the expensive product I carried away with me.
Once training was complete, the actual enumeration job involved traveling to multiple sites around the city, long waits, false starts, lots of paperwork and some heart ache, but all the information is confidential and I can't share any of the stories I heard on threat of imprisonment or fine. However, I can say that the wind blew, rain lashed down and enumeration forms turned to mush as we tried to fill them in while counting people outside several famous sites, such as the McAuley Water Street Mission, the Salvation Army on 14th Street and the Bowery Mission - which lives up to it's knock-about reputation despite the shiny presence of the New Museum literally two doors away.
I saw a cluster of enumerators on a stoop up the block yesterday. I stopped to commiserate. How many times do they have to come back to any given apartment if they get no response? Six times. That's a lot of leg work!
So give them a break - if you still haven't filled in that census form, do it now.
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup of the Day #29
Greening Up Cup
by Gwyneth Leech, 2010
Green India ink on white paper coffee cup
The High Line Park, that extraordinary oasis atop an old elevated rail line in Chelesea, is looking lush and gorgeous right now. The plants are acclimatizing well since the park opened a year ago and it feels more and more like the urban nature preserve of many imaginations, albeit with comfortable places to sit, amazing lighting at night and spotless, litter-free walkways.
There are also lots of trash cans - not found on the old High Line of course - and giving into my trash picking artist instincts I peeked into many during my walk there the other day, doing a quick survey of the contents around noon on a weekday. Far and away, there were more cardboard coffee cups than anything else: Joe's Coffee, Ninth Street Coffee, 'Wichcraft, Starbucks, 7-11, anonymous deli cups and more. 'Wichcraft sometimes has a coffee cart up here, but not today. These are all carry in, and leave behind.
Is it a New York City thing or is it everywhere, this walking with a coffee cup?
Read more at www.gwynethsfullbrew.com
Cups of the Day #31
Solo 30 x 30 studies
By Gwyneth Leech
India ink and whiteout pen on
White and brown Solo paper cups
I grabbed a stack of my coffee cup empties one morning this summer and took the R train down to the very tip of Manhattan. There Paul-André Fortier was set to perform his 30 minute dance called Solo 30 x 30 in front of the office tower, One New York Plaza. The dance takes place firmly within a large area demarcated by white lines and he has been doing it every day for 30 days as part of the River to River Festival.
On this the 27th day, the Drawing Center had stepped in to initiate a drawing event. Word had gone out via Facebook that artists should come and draw. So there I was at noon, sitting on the ground just outside the white lines with cups and pens at the ready. For the next 30 minutes I was mesmerized by the fluidity and grace of his performance as he echoed, embraced and transformed both the movement of people walking to and fro on their lunch hour and the lines of the surrounding architecture.
As I drew rapidly, looking up and down from my cups, the crisp black and white of his attire registered strongly, contrasting with the gray plaza surface and a tall brick building behind. My eye made repeated connections between his form and the similarly clad white-collar workers watching him dance.
At 12:30PM precisely Paul-André took his last elegant bow and exited the box. His face glistened with perspiration in the soaring noon heat, but his attire remained unrumpled and unstained, as if ready for an afternoon in an office cubicle.
I came to with a lap full of cup drawings, packed up my things and headed for the nearest food cart for a coffee, pleased by the thought that I had sketched his Solo 30 x 30 on cups made by the Solo cup company.
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup of the Day #28
Tea with Louise Bourgeois
By Gwyneth Leech
India ink on white paper coffee cup, 2010
The sculptor Louise Bourgeois died last week at the age of 98. She lived for decades in a narrow brownstone on 20th Street in Manhattan. Every Sunday afternoon, until she was well into her nineties, artists gathered for hours in a cluttered library on the first floor to show her their artwork.
I first ended up at one of these salons when I dared my sculptor friend Sarah McKenzie Smith, who was visiting from Scotland, to call her up and invite ourselves for tea. Louise's number was in the phone book. How shocked we were when she answered the phone and said, "come this Sunday"! We were even more surprised to meet artists from several different countries there, and a curator from the Museum of Modern Art who sat beside the wizened artist at her work table and handled the artwork. When Sarah made the call we had no idea this happened every week. And each salon was video-taped by an assistant. There must be thousands of hours of tape.
I took my daughter Megan, then five, to one of the salons when the artist was almost ninety. As we entered the house Megan sneezed and was nearly thrown out, but allowed to stay as long as she sat by the window as far away from Louise as possible. Megan had brought a little folder of princess drawings. When Louise saw them she asked, "Who did these?" I said, "Megan, she's five." "Impossible!" declared Louise. Then she had paper brought and gave Megan her own "favorite" red Sharpie to use. Under pressure, Megan drew a very respectable princess. Louise held it up and examined it. "Hmpf," she said, and turned to the next artist.
Louise was rather like a spider at the several salons I went to - sitting behind her table all in black, silently waiting for an interesting art morsel to land in front of her. No tea was served, but there was psycho-drama in abundance. That first time, Sarah and I went elated, but came away disturbed. Many artists have similar recollections. Maybe it is best not to meet your art idols!
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup of the Day # 30
"Roots and Tendrils"
By Gwyneth Leech
Sumi ink and white-out pen
on green paper coffee cup, 2010
I am sitting on my front steps in the shade drinking an ice Illy coffee from Amy's Bread on 9th, and thinking about the sidewalk in front of my co-op building. Something truly weird is underway. The cement slab has heaved up on the curbside - by nearly six inches, and is going down towards the steps. This is an active, albeit slow-motion process. I reckon it is changing every week.
It is surely caused by the steet tree in front of the building, a hardy looking locust that is bigger, bushier and more flowery than its neighbors.
I am on the co-op board of my 20 unit building and I can't resist this type of problem. I called a contractor last week who came by to look. Yes, he confirmed, it is the tree. He has to take up the cement, cut the offending surface roots and repour the sidewalk. It will cost $3700.
I wondered if the city could help us? I called 311, the NYC hotline. No, Co-ops over four units are not eligible for sidewalk repairs or tree service, but the contractor can't just cut the roots because the tree belongs to the New York City Parks Department. In fact, anything we do within 25 feet of the tree will require a permit from them.
My friends at the comunity garden on 48th Street recommend a tree specialist who also came by. Turns out it is not a Locust at all, rather a Chinese Scholar Tree AKA Pagoda Tree AKA Serafina. But he can't do anything for me. He tells me to call a cement contractor. I told him we already did. He gives me a name of someone who specializes in street tree sidewalk problems.
I called this contractor too. He confirmed what everyone else said - the Parks Department has to agree that the root can be cut. If they say no because cutting the root jeopardizes the tree, then there is not a long term solution to our sidewalk problem. And here is the final snag - the Parks Department can't make the decision until the cement sidewalk is broken open and the root revealed.
Now I am totally stumped. Do we pay $3700 to dig up the sidewalk to find out we cannot fix our problem? "I see this situation every day", says the contractor as he heads back to his truck.
Well, we love our street trees and I have no idea what to do next. So I sit on the steps sipping my coffee, watch the tree grow and admire the power of vegetation to lay waste the works of man.
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Late afternoon shot of Hypergraphia in the Flatiron Prow, from the corner of 23rd and 5th Avenue. Photo by Bernard Klevickas.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Hanging cups close up. Photo by Rhoma Mostel.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Hanging cup drawings from the front of the Prow. Photo by Sylvie the Camera
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Passersby shooting Hyerpgraphia at the Prow with a cell phone on a rainy night. Photo by Gwyneth Leech.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #37
by Gwyneth Leech, 2010
Sumi ink on
White paper coffee cup
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Hypergraphia in the Prow Artspace at the Flatiron Building, NYC.
Photo by Gwyneth Leech, from 23rd Street.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
The artist drawing on cups in the Prow, seen from 5th Avenue. Photo by Susan Baker.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #4 by Gwyneth Leech
Greek Drinking Cup
Acrylic on paper coffee cup
2008
More cup drawings and New York City stories about tea, coffee, art and life at
Cups close up of Hypergraphia from the front of the Prow Artspace, Flatiron Building, NYC, at 23rd Sreet.
Photo by Gwyneth Leech
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #19
Small Coffeebean Cup
by Gwyneth Leech
India ink on brown paper coffee cup, 2009
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup of the Day #10
Red Venti by Gwyneth Leech
India ink and white-out pen on
white and red printed paper cup.
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Interior of the Sprint Prow Artspace with suspended cups. Photo by Tina Seligman.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #6
Midtown Cup by Gwyneth Leech
India Ink brush pen on white paper coffee cup
2009
I am a painter living in New York City. Oil paint on canvas is my primary medium but since 2007 I have also been drawing on my empty paper coffee cups.
Visit my blog www.gwynethsfullbrew.com to read my New York stories about art, life, tea and coffee.
This coffee cup thing started at a monthly meeting of artists in New York City when Styrofoam coffee cups were gone one day, replaced by these pristine white paper cups. I had a Rotring art pen in my pocket and two hours of sitting with a lot of energy in the room. I started to draw restlessly on my empty coffee cup and an obsession was born.
A stint of jury duty in the City some months later led to the elaboration of my technique with art pen and brush pens. I now save the cups from the drinks I buy and occasionally collect them from the other artists with whom I meet for tea or coffee around town. I wash and dry them and record on the bottom the date, place and occasion, as well as the drink that was consumed, thus capturing the social moment just passed.
Cup of the day #17
Drip Cup by Gwyneth Leech, 2009
Color India ink on white paper coffee cup
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
The artist at work drawing on cups in the Prow, seen from inside the Sprint Prow Artspace. Photo by Tina Seligman.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
People stopping to study the cup drawings, seen from inside the Sprint Prow Artspace. Photo by Tina Seligman.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cups and reflections - Hypergraphia at the Prow Artspace, Flatiron Building, NYC.
Photo by Norma Greenwood.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hyerpgraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #33
Ebullient Cup by Gwyneth Leech, 2010
Colored ink and white-out pen on
Blue printed paper coffee cup
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Rainy day accident at the Flatiron, seen from inside the Prow Artspace. Photo by Tina Seligman.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cup of the Day #15
Topiary cup
by Gwyneth Leech
Colored India ink on white paper coffee cup, 2009
More cup drawings and NYC stories about art, life, tea and coffee
Cup drawings. Photo by Judy Haselton.
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew
Cups close up of Hypergraphia from the front of the Prow Artspace, Flatiron Building, NYC, at 23rd Sreet.
Photo by Gwyneth Leech
Hypergraphia, an installation of drawings on upcycled take-out cups by NYC artist, Gwyneth Leech, will be in the Flatiron Prow Artspace from September 20 to December 31.
Follow the progress of Hypergraphia on the artist's blog, Gwyneth's Full Brew