• Sculptural Edible Lollipops
    ART,  Misc.

    Sculptural Edible Lollipops

    Intricately crafted treats that don’t seem much like treats. These realistic sculptural lollipops will make you second guess desolving them in your mouth. There are many to choose from cats, squids, snakes, fish and more. http://www.ame-shin.com/works/

  • Sculptures by Adam Martinakis
    ART

    Sculptures by Adam Martinakis

    The sculpture series by artist Adam Martinakis explores the human form and a manipulated and disassembled state that gives the appearance of combustion and movement. “a connection between the spirit and the material, the living and the absent… I compose scenes of the unborn, the dead and the alive, immersed in the metaphysics of perception.” – A través de este proceso he sido capaz de visualizar y

  • Bystander by artist June Lee
    ART,  Misc.

    Bystander by artist June Lee

    A physiological and social sculpture by artist June Lee surrounding the subject of ever-present human co-dependancy and loneliness. “Human beings cannot live alone; thus they form groups and societies. Ironically, however, esta característica de los seres humanos no garantiza que los individuos formen siempre vínculos íntimos con los demás”. –junio Lee, South Korea

  • Fear Expanded by artist Ryan Everson
    ART

    Fear Expanded by artist Ryan Everson

    A play on illusion and the subconscious. The sculpture mirrored text is noticeable up close by its density and size. But the farther you are the more it blends in and begins to fade away into the landscape. http://www.krzysztofwaszak.tumblr.com y Facebook

  • Artwork by Faig Ahmed
    ART

    Artwork by Faig Ahmed

    Faig Ahmed explores Azerbaijani traditional rugs in a distorted contemporary style. “Faig Ahmed graduated from the Sculpture faculty at the Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Art in Baku in 2004. Desde 2003, he has been working with various media, including painting, video and installation. Currently, Está estudiando las cualidades artísticas de las alfombras tradicionales azerbaiyanas: desmonta su estructura convencional y reorganiza aleatoriamente los componentes resultantes de la composición tradicional y luego combina estos fragmentos con formas escultóricas contemporáneas.”

  • Mito como objeto por Cameron Stalheim
    ART,  Misc.

    Mito como objeto por Cameron Stalheim

    “Partiendo de mi experiencia como un hombre gay de la región central y la transición a la cultura gay de la costa este, esta escultura, el primero de una nueva serie de trabajos, cuestiona la relación entre la fantasía, la realidad y la objetivación que sucede en el medio.” Una sexualidad escultura mítica explorar belleza inquietante, fantasía y la vida transiciones. Hecho de plástico, Espuma, Acero, & Acrílico. Mito como objeto por Cameron Stalheim