Tagged
art


04:06 pm, 1872mm
1 note
photoset

Artist Eric Barclay takes ordinary food packaging, and breathes life into them with some hand painting. Whether a Coffee-Mate container, or Diet Coke can, Barclay creates three-dimensional versions of his unmistakable characters

(Source: foodiggity.com)


10:02 am, 1872mm
video

Japanese artist Riusuke Fukahori creates three-dimensional fish paintings. See more right here.


09:40 pm, 1872mm
video

Some nice Tape Art by Max Zorn


11:21 am, 1872mm
1 note
photoset

See through church by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh.


01:39 pm, 1872mm
10 notes
photoset

Remnants

Remnants is a series about recollection and remembrance. Each ‘remnant’ in the series is composed of three found photos–each from a different point in the subject’s life–that have been cut into strips and woven together to form a portrait of a person who has passed away. Remnants uses cloth as a metaphor for memory. As Peter Stallybrass writes in Worn Worlds, “The magic of cloth is that it receives us: receives our smells, our sweat, our shape even.” This is one of the marvels of memory as well: we perceive each moment in our lives; these are eventually woven together to form our memory. Each piece in this series creates a likeness of an individual that–rather than depicting an accurate visual representation of that person at any given time–presents a recollected coalescence of that person’s appearances throughout his or her life.

By Grag Sand

(Source: behance.net)


11:05 pm, 1872mm
photoset

Great shade-art.


10:36 pm, 1872mm
2 notes
photoset

Old school art.

British artist Keira Rathbone uses typewriters, instead of brushes and pencils, to create amazing portraits and drawings.


08:11 pm, 1872mm

09:24 am, 1872mm
photoset

Original sculptures starting from simple books by the artist Brian Dettmer, currently living in Atlanta. Transformations on books printed such as works of anatomies, dictionaries or handbooks, creating very impressive forms.

See more sculptures by Brain Dettmer 

(Source: fubiz.net)


11:05 am, 1872mm
1 note
photoset

Als je echt wat wilt ontdekken moet je onder water zijn. En dat is zeker het geval bij dit kunstproject van Jason de Caires Taylor. De beste man maakt levensgrote sculptures van cement en laat deze vervolgens in de oceaan rond Zuid-Amerika (o.a. Cancun, Mexico) afdalen. Naarmate de tijd vergaat worden de sculpturen onderdelen van de omgeving.

Voor het hele project zie: http://www.underwatersculpture.com