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n02_sean-heavey.jpg (JPEG Image, 990x567 pixels) Official website of the Swedish super sports car manufacuturer. LACMA Home. 4a26689v.jpg (JPEG Image, 1024x814 pixels) - Scaled (89%) 2011 Shayton Equilibrium Renderings - Front Angle 2 - 1280x960 - Wallpaper. 1965-Ford-Mustang-Fastback-Cammer-SA-1024x768.jpg (JPEG Image, 1009x504 pixels) Modern 'Stars' Made To Look Like 'Vintage Pin-Up Art': Pics, Videos, Links, News. 15-render-FG.jpg (JPEG Image, 1000x750 pixels) - Scaled (97. Wide.jpg (JPEG Image, 2560x1600 pixels) - Scaled (45%)

Vincent van Gogh Gallery - Welcome! Aystein-Lunde-Ingvaldsen3.jpg (JPEG Image, 1024x579 pixels) Ultimate Flash Face v0.42b. Industrial design courses ? designboom. Buonarroti. Salvador Dali Museum (thedali.org) / The official site of the Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, featuring a comprehensive collection of works by Salvador Dali.

The Museum of Modern Art. DevianArt.com. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. New York. Dallas Museum of Art - Home. The Art Institute of Chicago. Most Popular Artists. The most popular artist searches last month: a not-to-be-taken-too-seriously measurement of which famous artists have the greatest "mindshare" in our collective culture.

Most Popular Artists

Moving up: Edgar Degas (#22 to #12), Titian (#28 to #18), and realist painter Janet Fish (appearing for the first time on the list at #29). Moving down: Joan Miro (#13 to #19), Wassily Kandinsky (#11 to #24) and Paul Gauguin (#21 down to #32). How we measure popularity: In order to eliminate any kind of selection bias due to search engine ranking, external links, etc., we only count internal links from our own search box and our artist listings. Clock. Sketch Swap. G A L L E R Y. 290809053349.jpg (JPEG Image, 1393x1049 pixels) - Scaled (69%)

Street Artist Turns Sidewalks Into Stunning 3-D Landscapes. Kurt Wenner, the artist credited with inventing 3-D street art, which does not require special glasses, shares the secrets of his stunning works. To view our videos, you need to enable JavaScript. Learn how . install Adobe Flash 9 or above. Install now . Then come back here and refresh the page. Kurt Wenner, seen above, is no acrobat. The temporary piece was recently done in Manhattan's Financial District as a promotion for Celebrity Cruise's new Silhouette in order to allow passersby a chance to step inside the ship's Lawn Club Grill. Wenner, a one-time artist for NASA, has mastered the technique of "trompe l'oeil," or making a 2-D picture seem like a 3-D world, and how he does this is understandably complicated. "Actually I solved a bit of a problem that baffled Renaissance artists, and that was how to show the width of human vision," says Wenner.

Just to be clear, the works only appear to be 3-D when viewed from a single, exact spot.