MCCANN (Australia) for Metro Trains
“Love Song” (Mariee Sioux)
Ma Love Song, je la dédie aux moutons du Mont Noir (Flandres, 59) auxquels j’ai fait de long câlins hier soir avant de...
For Connor McSheffrey, shooting photography with his iPhone is a great creative outlet, it keeps him in an artistic mindset even...
Odile Mandrette -France-
“Les personnages d’Odile sont singuliers et fascinants ; ils invitent au respect tout autant qu’au sourire. Façonnés dans...
Yamashita was born in Asakusa, Tokyo. At the age of three, he suffered an acute abdominal disorder which, although not life threatening, left him...
高崎フェアリーランド・カッパピア
Paper sculpture,
Allen and Patty Eckman
littlechien posted this
51 posts tagged Sculptures
Super excited to announce that a selection of my work is currently available at Partners & Spade in NYC! Stop by this weekend and check it out!
Giant Stick Insect. Human hair, paint. Sculptures Made From Human Hair -
Map Sculptures of Matthew Picton
Artist creates sculptures representing cities, using paper that is relevant to the city depicted. From CollabCubed:
From collages made with maps, to maps made with paper, some of them anyway. British artist Matthew Picton, who presently lives and works in Oregon, creates map sculptures. His most recent works are made of paper; not just any paper, but texts or sheet music that is significant to each city in some way. A few examples include: Jerusalem created from The New Testament, The Torah, The Armenian Bible and The Koran; Las Vegas in 1972 created from texts from Hunter S Thompson’s “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” (and luminescent paint); Dresden in 1945 using sheet music of the score of “The Ring” by Wagner; and Lower Manhattan created from headlines that accompanied the 2001 World Trade center bombing and DVD covers of the film “Towering Inferno” also book covers of the novel “The Plot Against America” by Philip Roth, just to name a few.
More examples and links can be found at CollabCubed
(via shinyslingback)
graphic artist Yoichiro Kawaguchiis developing robots designed to imitate primitive life forms
(via flgshp)
Courtesy of Design Boom… are these great works on display in Paris by artist Myriam Mechita. Glitter, porcelain and animal figurines… all put together to create a whimsical commentary on life, death and sculpture.
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