background preloader

Art

Facebook Twitter

Minkette Inspirations. Carnovsky. RGB Color est e pluribus unus RGB is a work about the exploration of the “surface’s deepness”.

carnovsky

RGB designs create surfaces that mutate and interact with different chromatic stimulus. Carnovsky's RGB is an ongoing project that experiments with the interaction between printed and light colours. The resulting images are unexpected and disorienting. The colors mix up, the lines and shapes entwine becoming oneiric and not completely clear. See the Wallpapers collections available: Solitude - 2010/2011 - A work in progress on the Behance Network. Artist takes light photography beyond the grave with detailed designs of skeletons living it up. Everyday activities include break-dancing, motorbiking and skateboardingDead cool images show skeletons hanging out in a graveyard and rising up to heavenPhotographer creates the magical pictures by using a long exposure and waving torch in the air By Emma Reynolds Published: 12:15 GMT, 30 August 2012 | Updated: 12:33 GMT, 30 August 2012 These eye-catching LED pictures of skeletons skateboarding, break-dancing and even kissing explore the bare bones of our daily lives.

Artist takes light photography beyond the grave with detailed designs of skeletons living it up

Photographer Darren Pearson, from Los Angeles in the U.S., has produced the incredible images using a torch to 'draw' figures on to his night-time scenes. The 29-year-old plans his creative and often humorous designs by sketching rough ideas for the finished pieces. Don't break any bones! The lighter side of life: This colourful scene shows a skeletal angel rising up to heaven on wings He sets his camera up in a dark and deserted spot and puts it on a long exposure. Prints of his magnificent artwork cost just £22 each. Sistine Chapel. Lace Fence by Demakersvan. The Lace Fence designed by Demakersvan is a security fence unique in its design by its craft and assembled patterns.

Lace Fence by Demakersvan

The patterns come in a variety of themes, showing how something which was meant purely functional can also be decorative. Enjoyed this post? Share it! 13 Disturbing Pieces of Art from History. The media is often criticized for showing violent and disturbing imagery. Movies, TV, video games, tabletop RPGs, comic books, and various other things have all gone through periods where they're blamed for exposing children to dark and unsettling things. But as these fine art examples prove, violent and disturbing imagery is nothing new. (Obviously, this article contains some disturbing content.) 1.

Peter Paul Rubens - Massacre of the Innocents Painted in 1611, Massacre of the Innocents is Rubens' interpretation of Herod's order to kill every young male in Bethlehem, as recounted in the Gospel of Matthew. 2. This is but one of a series of works featuring disembodied body parts (including a painting of a pair of severed heads, equally as unsettling as this one) painted by French artist Théodore Géricault. 3. Andy Warhol is most famous for his pop art pictures of soup cans and Marilyn Monroe, but he also dabbled in some darker works, including his chilling piece, Big Electric Chair. 4. 5. 20 awesome examples of street art.

If you still need a proof that art can be found anywhere, those awesome examples of great street art should convince you.

20 awesome examples of street art

Silk. Corrugated cardboard house painting. 13 Oct 2006 These photos show painted cardboard shelters in the homeless city that took root in the underground sprawl of Shinjuku station's western wing in the mid-1990s.

Corrugated cardboard house painting

A deadly fire swept through the community in February 1998, forcing the inhabitants out and conveniently allowing the city to proceed with long-awaited plans to construct the moving walkway that now exists there. The paintings were also lost in the fire. The cardboard house painters were Junichiro Take, who once spent 22 days in jail for performing his art in Shinjuku station, along with Takeo Yoshizaki, Yasuhiro Yamane, Itohisa Takano and others. Check out the full gallery here and read more background information here.

See more photos at Eyedia's gallery of Shinjuku cardboard house paintings. [Via: No-sword]