“Beauty is everywhere.” This is how Russian-born artist Ruslan Khasanov describes the motto that drives his creative work. In his latest video, he found beauty in bodily landscapes. He turns human skin into landscapes using nothing but some paint and a macro lens. It feels like you’re watching satellite shots of another world, so similar, yet so different from ours.

3 years after the release of his experimental video “Warm-Up,” Ruslan decided to make a sequel. He says it fascinated him to see the paint flowing down the human skin. Shot with the macro lens, the paint flowing along the folds of the skin look as rivers flowing through a landscape. I love it how such a simple idea gives such a mesmerizing result. Ruslan poured metallic and fluorescent paint on the hands, lips and nipples of the model. He used a Sony A7RII camera paired with a Sony FE 90mm f/2.8 Macro G lens. As he shares with DIYP, it took him 4 months to complete the project, and you can see the final result in the video above. Ruslan also shared some of the photos with us, which are equally magical, abstract and surreal as the video:

About the Artist

Ruslan Khasanov is a Russian-born designer and artist. His work is driven by finding beauty all around him, which he expresses in music videos, typography and illustrations. In his work, Ruslan uses materials such as dust, oil, blood, bruises, sunbeams, soap, fire, salicylic acid, ice, mirror, paint, ink etc. If you’d like to see more of Ruslan’s work, make sure to check out his Instagram, Facebook page and Behance portfolio. You can also follow him on Twitter, and view his videos on his Vimeo channel.