Forbes
“The white coat with black tulle shaped like a face by Benjamin Shine…only seconds from the time it was sent down the runways, photographs of it flooded news feeds and ignited conversation.”
Grazia
“The collaboration between Galliano and the artist Benjamin Shine was pure fire.”
The Business of Fashion
“The most perfect moment in the collection was the face constructed in tulle by artist Benjamin Shine, bursting out of a long white coat.”
Architectural Digest
“Benjamin Shine Transforms Bergdorf Goodman’s Windows.”
New York Times
Harmony features on the print cover of the Arts Supplement: “29 Rooms is a creative playhouse for the instagram set -18,000 tickets sold out in advance.”
Artnet
“Benjamin Shine has created a stunning double portrait of sisters and singers Chloe x Halle, protégés of Beyoncé, in a thin wire mesh. Suspended from the ceiling and rotating, the ethereal work is paired with headphones playing a song recorded by the duo.”
Vogue
“Givenchy’s latest hit is thanks to the brand’s partnership with artist Benjamin Shine.”
Town & Country Magazine
“Bergdorf Goodman’s New Store Windows are Bound to Stop Traffic.”
Hypebae
Film Interview
Watch Maison Margiela Collaborator Benjamin Shine Discuss His Otherworldly Tulle Art
Billboard
“Benjamin Shine, famous for his delicate sculpted tulle artworks, has collaborated with American R&B sisters Chloe x Halle on an audio-visual installation that explores the beauty and power of energies uniting.”
Surface Design Association
“Gob-smackingly skillful & original use of fiber – in this case, TULLE – to create form out of nothingness.”
Twelve Magazine
Interview
“Benjamin Shine: Master of Tulle”
The Observer
Interview
“Maison Margiela and Bergdorf Goodman Have Both Commissioned These Tulle Faces.”
Vogue Italia
Interview
Augustman
Givenchy Collaboration with Benjamin Shine
Design Milk
“Mind-blowing portraits by Benjamin Shine. He irons them! The three-dimensional pieces show unbelievable likeness to the person they are meant to portray, despite the use of such a raw textile.”
Independent
(Interview with Wired Editor, David Rowan)
“There’s a fantastic creative buzz going through the UK at the moment.” In comments that reflect the breadth of the magazine’s interests, he cites the work of designer Thomas Heatherwick for the UK pavilion at Shanghai Expo, the fashion-inspired artist Benjamin Shine’s use of fabric in his artwork, and the “extraordinary success story” of Michael Acton Smith’s Moshi Monsters, an online game with an audience of 15 million children.”
The Guardian
“Best described as a visionary artist and designer (a label for the sake of introductory brevity, as it doesn’t nearly do him justice), Shine skillfully straddles product development and artistic innovation … this young British prodigy is hot property.”