Tidying Up Art by Ursus Wehrli
Wehrli takes everyday scenes of disorder and rearranges them into neat rows, sorted by different attributes such as color, size, shape, and type, etc.
(via frezned)
Tidying Up Art by Ursus Wehrli
Wehrli takes everyday scenes of disorder and rearranges them into neat rows, sorted by different attributes such as color, size, shape, and type, etc.
(via frezned)
by Stan Chow
A wall viewed from the Rooftop Bar and Cinema
Time by John Clang
A series of photographs taken at particular places in New York over a period of time, torn and reassembled:
A series that involves recording a location, to show the passing of time in a montage style. There is a sense of intimate intricacy of how time moves, and how people, albeit in a different time, are actually closer to one another and traveling in the same shared space. I’ve always been intrigued by the constant subtle changes in my urban environment. Every subtle shift affects my feelings and thoughts, hence my images respond acutely as a poetic reflection of myself in this environment. Working on this series, I explore how time moves in this seemingly static urban space. The people become the moving energy flowing through this space, marking the changes, forming the time. These images also explore my fascination that there are probably many time dimensions in this universe. We may have a ‘life’ that exists similarly on a different path, one minute before or after the one we’re living now. We merely just exist in this current dimension, and sometimes when time paths collide, we have déjà vu experience. (…close)
More examples (and other great photographic projects can be found at Cheng’s website here
Musaic
Hacked-together project displays album art created as a mosaic from other album art, based on listening suggestions from Rdio. From The Next Web:
One of the projects that I enjoyed the most is called “Musaic“, developed by Ian Mckellar. Using Rdio’s API, the site randomly shows album art comprised of other album art in a mosaic. By clicking the tiles, that album will open up.
Clicking on one of the blocks will open up another album.
More about the project from The Next Web here
Try it out yourself here
BLIND BOY!
Music: Lydia Cole
Art/Direction: Ralph Matthews
Lydia is one of the best there is
Amazing papercrafts by Zim and Zou
Do Min
South Korean photo-realism painter has experimented with some ideas for subject matter (as you can see above, the artist has tried their hand at night-time neon reflections and expensive commodities), but interestingly has settled on dice and poker chips continuing as subject matter. Not surprisingly, works that feature these work particularly well, the compositions are striking.