Bob Alexander, a LEGO and motor racing enthusiast, creates these incredibly lifelike automobiles. The choice of bricks is perfect, and his attention to detail puts him up there with some of the best builders in the genre.
Japanese artist Aki Inomata is using a 3-D printer to enhance the appearance of the humble hermit crab. She created a series of crystalline shells that put the skylines of New York, Thailand, and Greece on the backs of the ocean’s most famous homebodies.
Conor Harrington works with a superb blend of the historical and hypermodern. The Irish graffiti artist paints outdoor murals worldwide to considerable acclaim.
Carl Warner from the UK creates landscapes from the human form. An alternative portrait of a human being whose body becomes a landscape of themselves and plays on the sense of space in which we dwell.
Part art project, part utopian experiment, by street artist Swoon (her real name is Caledonia “Callie” Curry) and others. They built a collection of ramshackle from recycled materials, which where visually striking rafts to float down rivers and canals with a loosely defined purpose.
These ten beautiful photos by Toronto-based Peter Schafrick turn centrifugal force into art. It captures the alluring messiness of paint-soaked toys, dizzied by a home-brew rotating apparatus he calls “The Spinster.”
The ‘Dreamy Nature’ by Robinsson Cravents from Columbia. Aimed to recreate situations and feelings with a positive mood, these digital artworks are based on his childhood dreams, and the colours selected from his daughter’s shirt.
Tomáš Libertíny from Slovakia lets bees make honeycomb sculptures. He makes a shape and coats it with wax. The whole structure is covered by a transparent case and thousands of bees are pumped in, who over time make a honeycomb structures out of it.
These are digital drawings developed primarily for aesthetics by Maria Grønlund from Denmark. Bright saturated primary and secondary colors create a fresh, life-affirming impression to energize the viewer.
Amsterdam based Part of a Bigger Plan made this animation for the new Rijksmuseum project Rijksstudio. The film includes 211 artworks from the museum’s online collection.