Friday, August 27, 2010

Anything New From Kate Ground

London hosts the first exhibition of edible art all

gourmands British artists have joined forces with the most creative pastry chefs to organize an exhibition of edible art that will be open from today until next Sunday in the British capital.

Sugar, chocolate biscuits and have replaced the traditional oil paintings, canvas and plaster and building materials art under the "Mad Artists Tea Party" (The Tea Party crazy artists) that has resulted in "Cake Britain", the first art exhibit completely edible.

The concept of "Mad Artists Tea Party" has inspired this exhibition of edible art. Cake Britain.

In a nod to the most famous tea party in the history of literature, a small sculpture with Alicia the Land of Wonders starring chairs the exhibition at "The Future Gallery, London.

On the wall, the head of a reindeer cookie with chips chocolate gives a twist to traditional decoration.

This festival could not miss the sweet pastry production par excellence: a wedding cake with several floors and more than five feet in height in which, to fit in with the rest of originality edible sculptures, amazing clock Cuckoo protruding from one of the floors.

And so that visitors do not forget that not everything need have tasty sweet looking, tiny hamburgers with fries and sugar cake made out among the series of creations inspired desserts. David A.

Smith, considered by the British press one of the "most promising young artists," Prudence Staite, an expert in creating anything imaginable from food and Jellymonger-Bompas & Parr, designing spectacular culinary productions, sometimes architectural scale, are some of the artists present in this exhibition for charity.

Although admission is free, visitors can make donations that will be aimed at several British charities for purposes such as supporting children with terminal illnesses or fair trade.

Like many other exhibitions, works of art from the show are on sale, although this is the only case in that after the purchase, the creations are more likely to end up in the stomachs than in the homes of the buyers.

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