Sculpture by Xooang Choi
his thoughts on the injustices of human rights in Korea, using polymer clay to craft hyper-realistic modified human anatomical features in a rather grotesque manner.
a broken mirror, a bleeding fist..
a silver blade against a wrist..
tears falling down to lips unkissed..
ignore her and she won’t exist..
she’s not the kind you’ll come to miss..
artwork/verses credit: unknown
Rebecca Stevenson
“Pastorale”
Wax, 79 cm x 45 cm x 23 cm
2006
Artist Cédric Le Borgne - Les Voyageurs
As with his Voyageurs who journey around the world, Cédric Le Borgne invites everyone to view daily life in a fresh way, to rise up, to dream. By abolishing barriers, his work of exploring spaces is sensitive, his poetry subtly interacts with each place it comments upon. From sculptures made of chicken wire to photo or video, from perennial installations to spontaneous performance, from street-art to web-art, his work is free of formal constraints.
BC, 2011. Gouache on mylar.
The Eyes, 2010. Gouache on mylar.
Eyes, 2010. Gouache on mylar.
“Autorretrato”, by Yoan Capote
Disturbingly beautiful clay/porcelain sculptures by Israeli artist Ronit Baranga
gacy:
The use of fingers and mouths in my work is full of intent and meaning. The fingers and the mouth are very sensual organs in the human body and are therefore very powerful as separated items from it. The “seamless” combination of these organs in plates or cups, appearing as one, creates, in my opinion, new items that “feel” their environment and respond to it - Ronit (interview with Empty Kingdom)
it scares me and i like it
This is unbelievably surreal o_o
“In 1996 Mueck transitioned to fine art, collaborating with his mother-in-law, Paula Rego, to produce small figures as part of a tableau she was showing at the Hayward Gallery. Rego introduced him to Charles Saatchi who was immediately impressed and started to collect and commission work..” [via Wiki]
Ron Mueck is a London-based photo-realist artist. Born in Melbourne, Australia, to parents who were toy makers, he labored on children’s television shows for 15 years before working in special effects for such films as “Labyrinth,” a 1986 fantasy epic starring David Bowie. In the early 1990s Mueck was commissioned to make something highly realistic, and was wondering what material would do the trick. Latex was the usual, but he wanted something harder, more precise. Luckily, he saw a little architectural decor on the wall of a boutique and inquired as to the nice, pink stuff’s nature. Fiberglass resin was the answer, and Mueck has made it his bronze and marble ever since.
Generational Picture
Jesse Draxler. Captchas.
On Tumblr: http://jessedraxler.tumblr.com/#4
Stefano Bonazzi. Smoke. Digital composition printed on photographic fine art paper behind plexiglass plate.