Featured Artist
Kemalezedine

Kemalezedine is an Indonesian artist who specializes in automatic drawing. Born in Jogjakarta, Ezedine graduated from the Faculty of Art at Institute of Technology Bandung. There is something mystical in the way that Ezedine created his work. In plain sight, Ezedine seemed to draw abstract lines and shapes, but once we take deeper look, he actually created an intricate imagery that hypnotizes anyone that pays attention to it. The artwork he created for Artotel Sanur - Bali depicted Balinese icons in the form of traditional shadow puppet or "Wayang" surrounded with small motifs.


Pintor Sirait

Pintor Sirait is an Indonesian sculptor artist whose works transforms the rough edges of metal into the elegant and sleek eye pleaser that ignites the aesthetic feeling of the audience. Spending his childhood in Germany and Indonesia, Pintor spent sometimes in United States to study before settling down in Sanur, Bali to become a sculptor. He dedicated two of his artworks; The Orca Dance and The White Caps, to grace the lobby of Artotel Sanur - Bali which he hopes reminded the guests of the mesmerizing ambience of Sanur and its environment.


Mikhaela Cherry

From a simple, easy-to-learn method to become an intricate masterpiece, Mikhaela has adopted something ordinary to an elevated height. Inspired by independent artists, such as Iain Macarthur and Feline Zeger, Mikhaela has created amazing artworks using the Zentangle method. For Artotel Sanur, Mikhaela came out of her routine of using black and white and ended up with a mesmerizing, colorful pieces that graces some spots, from the Rooftop Wall to the Spa Areas.


I Made Wiguna Valasara

Valasara is a painter that always carries his root. The Bali native painter graduated from Institute of Art Indonesia (ISI) in Jogjakarta and went back to Bali to focus on his home's heritage. Since then, Valasara has been in many exhibitions, both local and international. For Artotel Sanur, Valasara created a painting that deeply intertwined with Balinese; kite dancing in the cloud. Flying kite has been a tradition for Balinese, especially in July or August, where the wind is playful and the sun shines brightly.


Natisa Jones

Natisa Jones created artworks that strike as playful and quirky, some even may call it "niche". Graduated with the title of Bachelor of Fine Arts at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 2011, Natisa has been on many solo and group exhibitions all around the world. Her artwork for Artotel Sanur reimagined the concept of kite and fused it with human experience. She used kites as an imagery to adrift, float, to express a space detached of anything too weighty.


Ines Katamso

Ines is a master in her craft. Not only that she has a title of Master of Art and Design from Antibes, France, Ines also attended Fashion and Fabric Design School in Marseille, France. As a mixed race of France and Indonesia, Ines displayed her duality in her artworks. She often combines traditional Javanese elements with her own intricate graphic and contemporary approach. One of her unique point is that she always plays around with different materials that elevated her artwork to higher dimension. The same method was used for her piece in Artotel Sanur where her playful hands created colorful geometric shaped kites that resemble countless kites that invades the sky in windy season.