Painting on water.
When the guy lifts the canvas from water at the end, my jaw dropped.
An aggregate 10-05
charcoal, nylon threads, etc.
h cm 270, 70 X 70 cm
2010
Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka will exhibit a glass window made of 500 crystal prisms at MUSEUM. beyond museum in Seoul.
(via browawawah)
Stacee Kalmanovsky - Rain, 2005 - suspended glass droplets
Occasionally, I see confessions on this blog complaining about underachieving artists being big headed and acting like they’re the next Leonardo da Vinci, and sometimes I see confessions complaining about good artists putting themselves down and fishing for sympathy.
(via mrocio)
Roman Opałka was a French-born Polish painter who painted numbers. In 1965 he began painting a process of counting – from one to infinity. Starting in the top left-hand corner of the canvas and finishing in the bottom right-hand corner, the tiny numbers were painted in horizontal rows. As of July 2004, he had reached 5.5 million. (via triangulation)
(via ium)
Children’s drawings painted realistically
Dave DeVries posed the question: What would a child’s drawing look like if it were painted realistically? The results are these and many other paintings that range from weird to wonderful. They form part of The Monster Engine Project.
(via meanwhale)
Because of AKIRA, I resigned as the brash, charismatic leader of a violent teen biker gang and went to animation school.
One of the above statements is true.
Art by Jake Wyatt







