Ricettario: A Balanced Diet by Karsten Wegenerto and Elena Mora
Playful sculptures presenting a visual reminder to keep a healthy and balanced...
Junk food on fire: new photo series by Henry Hargreaves
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Henry Hargreaves is a fine one indeed. It looks like he’s on a roll destroying...
Takashi Murakami @ #GaleriePerrotin 2013
Yesterday we had the utmost pleasure to join Kenny Scharf in his East Williamsburg studio. Here are some of the highlights from his first floor...
Contingent Continents: The World Over
Hundreds of ants industriously eat away at a map of the world in Rivane Neuenschwander’s video work, ...
This will be a mini-series, I think. Well, depending on how the story progresses.
MIT edX: Classical Mechanics with Walter Lewin
8.01x is an online version of Classical Mechanics, which is the first of MIT’s introductory...
Astounding Tilt-Shift Perspectives of World Monuments!
Anyone who’s traveled to popular touristic sites knows the feeling of...
For his 2012 TED Talk, 365 days after he initiated the Inside Out project, French artist JR was asked to answer the question “Can art...
3 posts tagged spencer tunick
In continuation of our post of nude photography from yesterday, we thought we’d share these incredible photos by New York based artist Spencer Tunick. His group photos are the most impressive just based on scale, logistics and choreography (and the fact that they have gotten him arrested multiple times), but we think his handling of the single nude portraits is just as interesting and masterful.
Stripping For Tunick In Munich
Munich - 1700 volunteers stripped naked and got painted in red and gold today for artist Spencer Tunick! The famed American photographer is creating his interpretation of scenes from Richard Wagner’s opera Der Ring des Nibelungen.
The art installation, in Munich’s Max-Joseph Platz, was held to mark the opening of the 2012 Munich summer opera season!
On September 17 one thousand Israelis volunteered to be a part of a large-scale nude portrait by Spencer Tunick. This one is meant to call attention to the environmental concerns surrounding the famously salty Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth, which experts warn could dry out by 2050.
[via Design You Trust]
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