Justin Matherly’s contorted sculptures, Doug Wheeler dives deeper into light and space, Madeline Hollander’s luminous Bortolami debut, and more.
Kiki Smith talks about the roles that her family, domesticity, and death play in her work.
If You Are Thinking Its A Pillow? You Are Wrong! Pillow Made By Marble, Amazing Pillow Made By Marble, Realistic Pillows Sculpted
Norwegian artist Rune Guneriussen works in the transition between installation and photography. As a conceptual artist, he explores a fascinating balance of human culture and...
New fear unlocked.
Design collective Numen/For Use was incepted in 1998 as a way for its members — industrial designers Sven Jonke, Christoph Katzler and Nikola Radeljković — to push the boundaries of architecture, design and conceptual art. They've collaborated on everything from furniture design to elaborate installations that invite the viewers to break the norms of how they ordinarily interact with space. Rarely do we see adults take off their shoes to bounce and play, but Numen invites their audiences to do just that. Their latest piece, String in Vienna is an inflatable, bounce house-like structure with an elaborate grid of cords that allow viewers (more aptly, participants) to defy gravity. Their other recent works include a levitating cave made out of clear tape in Tokyo and another inflatable structure with hammock-like netting hung strategically for optimal bouncing in Yokohama, Japan.
Photo © Tim Noble & Sue Webster
Looking at these installations, I imagine they are like clues indicating a secret trail somewhere otherworldly. Like something out of a children's book, Hansel and Gretel have left a trail, but instead of white pebbles, this time they've left retro lamps. Alas it's not Hansel and Gretel with a new
Explore 林D's 942 photos on Flickr!
View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dan Tobin Smith (@dantobinsmith) Everyday objects form ghostly shapes and letters in the wonderfully eerie
In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the preserved skins of exotic animals from faraway lands were brought back to Europe by explorers. The hides would be handed over to taxidermists w…
French artist Bernard Pras uses junk and discarded materials to create his large-scale "paintings" whose visual construction bears a resemblance to that
If you haven’t yet seen Rashad Alakbarov’s amazing art installations, then I strongly encourage you to take a moment and check these out. Painting with light has been a tagline for many…
Mexican artist and photographer Mauricio Alejo has spent the last 16 years of his career taking everyday items and transforming them into peculiar objects for...
benjamin shine has realized a five piece installation using his signature material, tulle, in the windows of new york's bergdorf goodman department store.
expecttheunexpectedtoday: expecttheunexpectedtoday Elephant Bed Fabrica by kinetic sculptor John Grade
Norwegian photographer Rune Guneriussen photographs man-made objects in nature as if they belonged there. The objects are arranged to look like packs of
Tyrrell Winston lives and works in New York, NY. Tyrrell is known for his found-object artworks, which feature deflated basketballs, broken nets, and cigarette butt compositions. Winston walks around different New York City neighborhoods and collects such “trash” to turn into sculptures, which are displayed in multiple galleries around the world.
Bouke de Vries est un artiste restaurateur hollandais, qui travaille à Londres. Spécialisé dans l’art de la céramique et de la porcelaine, il s’i
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Jaime Pitarch è un artista spagnolo che ha creato una serie di sculture modificando completamente oggetti di uso quotidiano.
Una mesa y un destino: Casahari (la firma de Inés Ybarra) recorre las galerías de arte y diseño milanesas más efervescentes.