
Innovative mosaics and graphics in creative layouts

The art of creating always requires a good deal of inventiveness and inspiration. not for nothing, the ancient greeks believed in the muses, beautiful women to inspire mosaics. It is from the word muse that the term mosaics is derived., ancient technique that uses small pieces of material to form decorative panels and creative layouts.
Complex graphics and geometries appear in the mosaic Cronos, which has white and lead colors, inspired by ornamental rocks.
The beauty of this work enchants those who visit Greco-Roman and Byzantine buildings around the world. No brazil, the Church of Pampulha, designed by Oscar Niemeyer (1907-2012) in Belo Horizonte, it has a mosaic of tiles created by the muralist Paulo Werneck (1907-1987). In different shades of blue, the work seems to integrate the architect's curvilinear design with the sky of the capital of Minas Gerais.
The mosaics also guide the paths of those who walk along the sidewalks of several capitals in the country, like Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Belo Horizonte itself, each with drawings that represent the mood and the way of being of each of these cities.
Artemis invests in a 30-shaped organic hexagon×30,3cm, trend in decor
In the décor and in the architecture, mosaics gain strength in coatings that explore colors and geometry in small formats to create modern layouts with various possibilities of use, with all the technology of the ceramic industry, while they rescue this ancient art.
With a color palette ranging from delicate ivory, passing through the sober lead tone and arrives in white, the Cronos porcelain tiles, Artemis and Delphi play with squares, rectangles and hexagons, proposing new possibilities for interior design.
released this year, as news bring organic and geometric shapes, and prints inspired by ornamental rocks, that marked architecture and humanity. All pieces are manufactured from porcelain tiles with the highest HD printing technology, which was developed to inspire the decor of everyone's dreams.
With 30 formats×30,3cm, 31×46,2cm e 29x45cm, the pieces can be used in facades, curved walls, columns and, inclusive, inside swimming pools - except Cronos and Delphi in the Lead versions, which are not suitable for this last use – bringing mosaic art back to the leading role it occupies in the great works of humanity.
Delfos plays with rectangles of different sizes to propose unusual layouts.