rik-bside: “Waiting for Fontana: concetto spaziale” - Riccardo Guasco (tagli su jpg)
MuCEM by Rudy Ricciotti photographed by Edmund Sumner
Photography by Edmund Sumner
Oggi nasce una rubrica dedicata all’art brut, un blog per spiegare, citare, indicare ospitato sulle pagine di ArteSera a cura di RIZOMI_art brut....
Great submission from Rebeca Prado
Rebecca Prado is a visual artist from Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Undergraduate Visual Arts student at UFMG,...
Toyin Odutola
A Lapse in Judgement?
Two-color lithograph print (Chine-collé)
14 x 11 1/8 inches
Edition of 10
(2012)
In collaboration...
The ‘Kunsthaus Graz’ by Sir Peter Cook and Colin Fournier is located right in the historic center of Graz, on the west bank of...
DRAWING BY KEN PRICE
Kenneth Price was an American ceramic artist and printmaker. He studied at the Chouinard Art Institute and Otis Art...
Meet Hideaki Kobayashi, the Famous Japanese Man Who Dresses as a Schoolgirl
13 posts tagged Lights
Love the ‘Rain’ multi-sensory lighting by design studio ilanel. Mixing sight and sound it invites touch and interaction.
Rain captures the shimmery sparkle of raindrops frozen in descent and voices a whimsy chime of flutes. Individual drops are visually quite subtle, but gain tremendous strength when multiplied and clustered in large groups.
A playful piece with the sleekness of a design classic that is suitable for residential and commercial use. For more information and Melbourne stocks visit www.ilanel.com
Revolights
Designed by Kent Frankovich, Adam Pettler and Jim Houk, Revolights uses thin LED strips that are magnetized to each rim and cast light down onto the ground in front and behind you. Currently just a prototype, the guys need your help over at their kickstarter to help fund it. So feel free to pitch in a few bucks if you want to ride this legit TRON bike. For the Users!
(via: technabob)
Tunnel View by Hans Kotter
Utilizing color-changing LED carefully positioned within plexglass, Hans is able to control the lights via remote control, which, when viewed from just the right angle, produces a tunnel-like structure emerging from the abyss. Have you ever seen a portal?
(via: mymodernmet)
Hiroshima, Japan: Paper lanterns float in the Motoyasu river in front of the Atomic Bomb Dome on the 66th anniversary of the nuclear strike
Photograph: Toru Yamanaka/AFP/Getty Images
(via dreaminginthedeepsouth)
Another bright (repurposing) idea:
Lights made from jelly moulds, from Re-Found Objects in the UK.
(spotted on Remodelista)
Want other lighting-related ideas? See earlier Unconsumption posts here.
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