Completely for sale and no worries, they are only human-like. Human Candles let you flirt with the macabre in a safe, non-committal way. Think morbid curiosity meets sculptural design, where body parts slowly melt, drip, and transform as the candle burns.
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My Sexuality by artist Pamela Rosenkranz
Pamela Rosenkranz’s My Sexuality does not announce itself loudly. It lingers. It shifts. It unsettles in a way that feels deliberate and deeply contemporary. Created in 2014, the work consists of smeared substances applied to mirrored panels, surfaces that glow and distort depending on light, movement, and proximity.
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Artwork by Waldemar Strempler
German artist Waldemar Strempler is a master of form, technology, and imagination. Working as a sculptor, graphic designer, and visual innovator, he manipulates images to create new perspectives on the human body.
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Anne de Vries – Brain to Brain Interface
Anne de Vries’s Brain to Brain Interface is the kind of series that pulls you in quietly, then refuses to let you look away. Created in 2014, the work uses mixed media portraiture to explore memory, connection, and the way images live inside our minds long after we think we have moved on.
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Dead Girl on Instagram @omgliterallydead
Yeah this boney babe might be dead, but in the era of social media and constant posts it’s hard to stay off Instagram. Go see Skellie’s familiar posts partying, getting a tan and foodie shots. Watch Dana Herlihey’s project unfold. #yolo
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Broken Hearts by artist Miguel Leal
Miguel Leal’s Broken Hearts series pulls you in quietly. At first glance, the works resemble ink blots. Abstract. Ambiguous. Almost accidental. But then the title does its work, and suddenly you see it. A heart. Every time. Each piece reveals a form that is unmistakable once recognized, yet never fully resolved. Hearts appear fractured, warped, and stained, as if emotion itself has been pressed onto the surface and left to bleed outward
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A Thousand Souls by Maciek Jasik
Artist’s statement: “The idea of the single soul is the basis of Western religion and society. It is the source of our individuality and our desire. And the portrait defines this self, by exposing the soul through a clarity of vision. We feel we can sense the texture of this soul through the details and subtleties of the subject’s expression and manner. In reality however, every ego, so far from being a unity is in the highest degree a manifold world, a constellated heaven, a chaos of forms, of states and stages, of inheritances and potentialities. It appears to be a necessity as imperative as eating and breathing for everyone…
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Photography By Salar Kheradpejouh
Salar Kheradpejouh’s photography lives in the dark and thrives there. These images are fluid, statuesque, and quietly intense, using the body as both subject and sculpture. Movement becomes the language, while black space does the heavy lifting. It is dramatic without being loud and deeply chic without trying too hard.
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Visual Temperature – Sofa by Cao Hui
Cao Hui’s Visual Temperature – Sofa turns furniture into visceral art. The piece is meaty, beefy, and uncomfortably lifelike, exploring textures that evoke raw, fatty flesh. Using resin, fiber, and mixed materials, Hui transforms a common object into something strikingly uncanny.
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“What I was waiting for” by Kris Lewis
Kris Lewis presents What I Was Waiting For, a series of painted portraits that feel both intimate and striking. The subjects are wide-eyed, stylish, and full of personality, capturing a sense of anticipation and quiet presence.
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Glass Sculptures by Shayna Leib
Shayna Leib creates glass sculptures that feel alive, organic, and slightly otherworldly. Her works resemble plants or organisms, reaching out toward the viewer with intricate, twisting forms that are mesmerizing and delicate.