Spring has sprung, and so have all the umbrellas!Take A Look At Our list of 18 examples of wonderful umbrella art to help you get through those dark, dreary days when the sun just doesn’t want to show up.
After taking a look at these, you might think twice about shoving your umbrella in the nearest trash the next time it buckles in the wind, and pass it on to your friendly neighbourhood artist instead. Who knows, your umbrella could be re-purposed into a new and wonderful art piece to rival the ones shown here.
Umbrella installation in Melbourne mall
Colourful umbrellas make us smile, but these black umbrellas sure do pack a punch, especially when they’re contrasted with the whiteness of the surrounding space; viewed from below, it’s almost like a huge flock of black umbrella-shaped birds is flying overhead. A bit creepy.
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Umbrellas can act as pretty cool lamp shades in this outdoor installation.
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The “Parasol Project” by Jo Ann Fleischhauer is a spectacular installation with a deeper meaning: the artist chose to contrast how emotions are portrayed in modern times versus the Victorian Era. The images on the parasols, which mimic floral designs, are actually colour-infused Magnetic Resonance Images (MRIs) - contemporary emotional representations - while the parasols themselves represent the desires of women in Victorian times, who used parasols to convey unspoken emotions to men.
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This bold ball of red umbrellas is nice to look at amidst a backdrop of construction.
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This umbrella ball is reminiscent of a huge beach ball.
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Colourful umbrellas make us smile, but these black umbrellas sure do pack a punch, especially when they’re contrasted with the whiteness of the surrounding space; viewed from below, it’s almost like a huge flock of black umbrella-shaped birds is flying overhead. A bit creepy.
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This umbrella installation by Christo and Jean-Claude, which finally came to fruition in 1991, was an international affair, with 1,760 yellow umbrellas set up in Gorman, California and 1,340 blue umbrellas erected in Ibaraki, Japan. The total project cost was $26 million, and it attracted 3 million people from around the world.
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Certainly not as ambitious as the Christo project, Channel 4 in London still managed to turn a few heads with their “raining umbrellas” and their number 4 umbrella.
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Artist Peter Holden animated his black umbrellas, setting them to open and close to Singin’ in the Rain.
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Vegas is known for going big or going home, and this exhibit at the Bellagio is no different. Pretty paper parasols dangle from the sky in the ever-changing gardens at this landmark hotel.
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The Casa Bruno Quadros is adorned with umbrellas because it was built in the 1890s to house an umbrella shop.
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Passersby posing for photos under the blue-sky umbrellas in Korea.
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Artist Victor Matthews painted a butterfly on 3,000 open umbrellas and set them up in Battery Park for his “Beyond Metamorphosis” work. That’s a lot of work!
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“Cumulus Light Canopy” by Steven Haulenbeek uses white photographers’ translucent “shoot-through” umbrellas to create variously sized configurations of umbrella lighting. They look just like the beautiful, fluffy clouds they’re named after.
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This installation is created by Ozcollective using 32 large golf umbrellas with curved handles, wood, cables and nets.
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A house in Zurich, the outside of which has become an art project of Swiss group.
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