Steady hands required: Japanese artist creates the tiniest sculptures

Steady hands  required: Japanese artist creates the tiniest sculptures
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By Doloresz Katanich
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Kakuho Fujii's passion is to create tiny figures.

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As Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels overwhelming success has shown, the tiny things in life are often adored and even fashionable. For miniaturists, it’s an appreciation that has long run through their fingertips. Artists began working on miniature objects and paintings in the early 16th century. This type of art received more and more attention as genres evolved and blossomed across various mediums. Despite the tiny works’ long history, artists are still finding new ways to show off their creativity. Some even construct, with unusual materials, sculptures that rise to only 2 millimetres.

Watch Japanese artist Kakuho Fujii, who uses a thin needle as his go-to tool. Click the video player above and stay tuned for more videos about travel, culture and savoir-faire around Europe on Living it.

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