
paper and wood
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Scott Campbell | Fubiz™
L’artiste tatoueur de New-York Scott Campbell expose ses dernières oeuvres à la galerie OhWow de Los Angeles. Intitulée “Noblesse Oblige”, cette exposition dévoile des créations réalisées au laser dans des planches de billets de $1. Un rendu impressionnant à découvrir dans la suite.A Millionaire's Playground Made from Thrown-Away Lottery Tickets - 1-800-Recycling
Ghost of a Dream’s “Easy Money” series uses recycled materials to create large-scale objects and scenarios that explore our innermost drives and desires. All images courtesy of Ghost of a Dream If a lottery ticket seems like the pass to your dreams of wealth coming true, then the discarded remains of non-winning tickets are not simply pieces of paper, but crushed dreams made real. Yet behind each dream lost is also the hope of better luck next time, allowing the cycle to continue — and a never-ending stream of raw materials for artists who might reuse the thrown-away slips of card and paper. Ghost of a Dream is a collaborative project by artistic duo Adam Eckstrom and Lauren Was. Unlike many other people, the husband-and-wife team do not regard unlucky lottery tickets as simply the end of a dream, but the beginning of one; their own dream of creating highly unusual art on a large scale seems to have come true, at least.Thirty five years ago I had yet to be born, but artist Scott Weaver had already begun work on this insanely complex kinetic sculpture, Rolling through the Bay , that he continues to modify and expand even today. The elaborate sculpture is comprised of multiple “tours” that move pingpong balls through neighborhoods, historical locations, and iconic symbols of San Francisco, all recreated with a little glue, some toothpicks, and an incredible amount of ingenuity. He admits in the video that there are several toothpick sculptures even larger than his, but none has the unique kinetic components he’s constructed.
One man, 100,000 toothpicks, and 35 years: An incredible kinetic sculpture of San Francisco | Colossal
Amazing San Francisco sculpture made of toothpicks ... - justpaste.it
“Rolling through the Bay”, the world’s largest kinetic sculpture made entirely of toothpicks. It has taken Scott Weaver more than 35 years and 100,000 toothpicks to build it. Incredible!
Toothpick Sculpture - BOOOOOOOM! - CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS
luise valdes: cardboard house
golany architects: hula visitors' c READER'S SUBMISSION blending in with the valley and echoing the mountain ranges, this building is modest in its appearance yet is the new site for bir... GRAPHIC DESIGN - may 17 - july 17 DESIGN - AEROBICS make graphic design work for you. with this course you’ll enhance your understanding of the basics and learn more about emerging developments within the field. SHOPPING - may 17 - july 17 DESIGN - AEROBICS we'll look at the seamless way in which design and consumer culture cross paths, with a focus on; shop design, packaging, carts, carriers, online shopping and markets.Artist Kiel Johnson has used common cardboard to meticulously re-create an incredible collection of old-school cameras — from the Instamatic to the Polaroid to the Hi-8. Johnson’s obsession with paper is infectious — it’s obvious in the way he constructs every button and lens notch. Read on to learn more about Johnson’s incredible analog tribute to great cameras of the past! That Johnson’s father was a printer speaks something of his obsession with paper. This tie is especially evident in his much-publicized show Publish or Perish at the Moore Gallery a few years back.

