Christopher
gilbert
Gilbert's work is really impressive and he knows how to thinks outside of the traditonal box. I love this picture. The paint dripping down makes the models dress. Simple concept but he pulls it off sexy style!
This picture is just the beginning. To view more pictures check out this link.
I think so too.
1980's
Arcade
Booty
Everybody was playing something back then.
Carving Exotic Melons
Whoa, this is great for summer parties, BBQ's and what not. Carving pumkins for Halloween is always tradition, why not add those skills to making some fruity, healthy delights that everyone can enjoy. This rocks.
Via: Red Bubble
Darth Vader Hot Air Balloon.
The Darth Vader Balloon is an 86 foot tall hot air balloon replica of Darth Vader’s helmet.
Belgian balloonists Benoit and Michel Lambert commissioned specialty manufacturer Cameron Balloonsto build the Darth Vader Balloon in 2007 (of course, only after receiving the official Lucasfilm OK).
The Lamberts now pilot the balloon in appearances all over the world. It will be featured at the Great Reno Balloon Race, September 9-11, 2011.
Source: Laughing Squid
Granada-born artist Paco Pomet bases his paintings on old archival photographs, interjecting silly, surreal, and absurd elements — skewed and stretched features, scale shifts, extra or missing limbs, or goofy pop imagery — commenting on the distorting nature of memory.
Paco Pomet - “Cookie Monster with Rebel Militia”
Via: Lost at Eminor
My work is about our relationship with the rest of nature, explored through notions of change, the passing of time, and the transience of everything around us. For me, creating seemingly solid structures or forms from thousands of individually suspended elements has a direct relation with my experience of these forces. There is a sense of fragility and a lack of solidity that carries through all the sculptures. I feel as if they are somewhere between movement and stillness, and thus in possession of a certain energy.
Claire Morgan
I feel a close connection with the natural world which I hope is evident in my work, but our clumsy, often destructive relationship with nature, and the 'artificial' world we have contrived for ourselves are of equal significance. Ultimately I find myself focussing on areas where the boundaries cannot be clearly defined.
The titles of the works are very important, and often make reference to historical or contemporary popular culture, words being appropriated from the titles of films or books, or phrases being manipulated through combination with the artwork. These connections often add a comedic element to the works, a sense of irony or bluntness that keeps them firmly rooted in my experience of the world that we humans inhabit. Though the phrases have a specific history, the jarring between the title and the form can bring a desirable ambiguity through intentionally creating confusion.
The processes involved in the work are laborious and there are thousands of individual elements involved, but clarity of form is of high importance. I do not wish the animals to provide a narrative, but rather to introduce an element of movement, or energy, or some sort of reality; animating or interacting with the larger architectural forms.
In Her Own Words
Via: Claire Morgan
Crayola Animals!
Someone had crazy amount of time on their hands. Wow, but God bless em'. These are pretty amazing. I wonder how many Crayola's they went through to make these. The detail is uncanny. I guess that's what you call some beastly skills, no doubt!
Crayola Crayons carved out to look like Animals. Sick!
Some Things Never Change, Do They?
Cool Flicks
Stumbled across these on the internets. Love em'
Art is like a border of flowers along the course of civilization.
Lincoln Steffens
I didn't free the slaves to hear
"An abortion can cost a ballin' nigga up to 50gs maybe a 100. Gold diggin' bitches be getting pregnant on purpose. #STRAPUP my niggas!"
- Kanye West via Twitter
about your bullshit.
Via: Hollywood Reporter