Pollock’s Sculptures Resurface

via ARTnews

It is really strange that I found this today. Recently I was talking to one of my co-workers about how I dislike Jackson Pollock’s paintings. How is throwing splashes of paint on a canvas considered art? How did it possibly make as much money as it did? He disagreed with me saying that Pollock had a method to his paintings, you have to really get lost in the painting to see what it is all about. Anyway… Here are some more examples of his work, but not the paintings. I can see the resemblance.

Click the link to read the article.

Untitled, 1956, plaster, sand, gauze, and wire. Before the current Matthew Marks show, the sculpture had never been exhibited.
©THE POLLOCK-KRASNER FOUNDATION / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK / COURTESY MATTHEW MARKS GALLERY.

Untitled, ca. 1943, a carved bone (possibly left over from a steak dinner), will be at Jason McCoy.
THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON, GIFT OF LOUISA STUDE SAROFIM IN MEMORY OF ALICE PRATT BROWN. / ©2012 THE POLLOCK-KRASNER FOUNDATION / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

Untitled, 1930-33, a basalt face that’s being offered by Leila Heller.
PRIVATE COLLECTION. COURTESY OF LEILA HELLER GALLERY.

Untitled, ca. 1949, plaster and paint on wire, is the sculpture that looks most like a “Pollock.”
THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON, GIFT OF LOUISA STUDE SAROFIM IN MEMORY OF ALICE PRATT BROWN. / ©2012 THE POLLOCK-KRASNER FOUNDATION / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK.

Art on Fire!

via Mail Online

Theses sculptures are made up of thousands of tiny colored matches. The artist, David Mach, creates the sculptures to resemble famous faces and legendary artworks. When he opens up his exhibition he lights the work on fire. Talk about an attention getter!

Visit David’s site!

The Devil: David Mach's head of the devil made with different coloured matches was set on fire in a recent performance

The devil on fire: David mach set his sculpture alight

The devil on fire: David Mach set his sculpture alight, a method which he discovered by accident in 1982

David Mach's take on Charlie Chaplin uses white, black and red matches mixed with wood

David Mach’s take on Charlie Chaplin uses white, black and red matches mixed with wood

Blue-Oop-a-Doop: 1930's cartoon character Betty Boop looks uncharacteristically blue after getting the 'match treatment'

Blue-Oop-a-Doop: 1930′s cartoon character Betty Boop looks uncharacteristically blue after getting the ‘match treatment’

Warhol-ian: The face of Marylin Monroe has been created in different colour combinations in a display which looks inspired by the legendary portrait series by Andy Warhol

Warhol-ian: The face of Marylin Monroe in different colour combinations in a display which looks inspired by the legendary portrait series by Andy Warhol

Pablo Picasso, made in 2010, has not yet been set on fire - although that may have amused the late artist
Mahatma Ghandi, portrayed in red
Red and Blue: Sculptures of Pablo Picasso, and Mahatma Ghandi, made in 2010, have not yet been set on fire by David Mach and his team

David on David: This sculpture made from yellow matches is a take on Michelangelo's famous David statue

David on David: This sculpture made from yellow matches is a take on Michelangelo’s famous David statue

A video of the action. The good part starts at 1 minute and 48 seconds if you can’t wait!

Video via YouTube

Michihiro Matsuoka | Steampunk Creative

Michihiro Matsuoka is a Japanese artist. Creating devices that combine animals and machinery. Matsouka’s work has been featured in twenty-five exhibitions throughout Japan. :-)

Materials: rasin and rasin clay
Check out Michihiro’s website

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Troll

I know this is old but I came across it today and wanted to share it. There isn’t much info on it so I’m giving you what I have.
The Troll: 12 Foot Tall Sculpture Built With Completely Non Toxic Materials

The Troll is a huge 12 foot sculpture built by Kim Graham and volunteers. The entire sculpture is built with non-toxic materials and was completed in 2006. 
For the months of August and September 2006 he was shown at the Vidya Gallery, 619 Western Ave. #22, Seattle WA, 98104. After that, several of the volunteers took him around to the local fairs and markets as a photo-op to get some exposure. They are hoping to find a more permanent home for him. They may have by now.

The Book Surgeon

A combination of Art & Books… Two of my favorite things. <3

Using knives, tweezers and surgical tools, Brian Dettmer carves one page at a time. Nothing inside the out-of-date encyclopedias, medical journals, illustration books, or dictionaries is relocated or implanted, only removed.

Dettmer manipulates the pages and spines to form the shape of his sculptures. He also folds, bends, rolls, and stacks multiple books to create completely original sculptural forms.

“My work is a collaboration with the existing material and its past creators and the completed pieces expose new relationships of the book’s internal elements exactly where they have been since their original conception,” he says.

“The richness and depth of the book is universally respected yet often undiscovered as the monopoly of the form and relevance of the information fades over time. The book’s intended function has decreased and the form remains linear in a non-linear world. By altering physical forms of information and shifting preconceived functions, new and unexpected roles emerge.”

Dettmer is originally from Chicago, where he studied at Columbia College. He currently lives and works in Atlanta, GA.

Want some more?

Visit his website
Brian’s Flickr
Interview with Brian

Skateboard Sculptures

This is awesome! Art made with skateboards! Check out the source for more good stuff.

 

Japanese artist Haroshi creates unique three-dimensional sculptures out of recycled skateboard decks. Layers of stacked wooden decks are transformed into sharks, body parts, fire hydrants, toys, fictional characters, and shoes.

Skateboard Sculptures

Skateboard Apple

Haroshi Shark

Skateboard Shark

Haroshi Skateboard Sculptures

Skateboard Moose

Skateboard Bear

Haroshi

Skateboard Pigeon

Skateboard Cat

Skateboards

Haroshi Skateboard Art

Skateboard Foot

Skateboard Mario

Skateboard Shoes

Skateboard Nike Shoes

Skateboard Shoe

Skateboard Hand

 

Creative Architecture

1. The Longaberger Company, Newark, OH

Longaberger is known for its handcrafted maple baskets, so its headquarters are obviously shaped like a giant basket. Not just any old basket, though. It’s a Longaberger Medium Market Basket that’s been blown up to 160 times its normal size. The basket includes a seven-story atrium, heated handles that prevent ice formation, and two 725-pound gold leaf Longaberger tags. Want to take a look the next time you’re in Ohio? Longaberger has visiting hours!

 

2. Twistee Treat Ice Cream

Between 1983 and the mid-1990s, Twistee Treat opened 90 or so ice cream shops around the country, and each one is shaped like a delicious cone of soft-serve vanilla. Want your own towering cone? A completely stocked one in Zephyrhills, Florida, is on the market for a mere $475,000. Or, if you’re on a budget but good with tools, the same listing also offers “A Separate Dismantled Ice Cream Cone Building” at the bargain price of $40,000.

 

3. Kansas City Public Library’s Parking Garage

Parking garages are usually eyesores, but this one’s beautiful. The garage for Kansas City’s Library is cleverly concealed behind what look like the bindings of 22 giant books. What’s really terrific is that local residents got to help pick what books would get the nod for 25-foot renderings on the side of the garage. Some of the tiles that made the cut: Catch-22, Invisible Man, The Lord of the Rings, Silent Spring, and Charlotte’s Web.

 

4. House of Free Creativity, Ashgabat, Turkmenistan


Kansas City doesn’t have a monopoly on book-shaped buildings, though. Turkmenistan cut the ribbon on this open book in 2006 as part of an effort to create a comfortable environment for journalists. Of course, “free creativity” may be a bit of a stretch. The journalists in question all work for Turkmenistan’s state-run press, and the country had no foreign or private media and very little open Internet access when the building opened during the reign of the late dictator Saparmurat Niyazov.

 

5. The Hood Milk Bottle

This one’s a Boston institution. In 1933, Arthur Gagnon wanted to open an ice cream stand in nearby Taunton, and he designed his new business to look like a giant milk bottle. After several changes in ownership (and a sail from Quincy to Boston proper), the structure is now known as the Hood Milk Bottle and resides at the Children’s Museum. It’s 40 feet tall and could hold 58,000 gallons of milk.

 

6. United Equipment Company, Turlock, CA

United sells and rents heavy equipment like compactors and excavators, so it’s only natural that the company’s headquarters building is shaped like a two-story yellow bulldozer. The bulldozer building, which opened in 1976, is “using” its redwood treads and giant blade to move a pile of boulders. [Image courtesy of the Flickr user Nevada Tumbleweed.]

 

7. The Phoenix Financial Center, Phoenix, AZ

Financial services made early use of massive punch-card-driven computers, and the Phoenix Financial Center looks as if it’s offering an odd tribute to this antiquated technology. The entire building has narrow slits for windows and looks like an oversized punch card. According to Phoenix’s municipal government, though, the resemblance was purely accidental; the narrow windows are there to minimize the effects of the hot desert sun on the building’s air conditioning bills. Nevertheless, local residents still refer to it as “the Punchcard Building.” [Image courtesy of Flickr user mcbrennan.]

 

8, 9 and 10. And the Rest!

Furnitureland South’s 85-Foot Tall Highboy is more statue-attached-to-building than building itself, but the North Carolina landmark is still worth a mention. As is BMW’s Four Cylinder building in Munich, which architect Karl Schwanzer designed to stand out next to the eye-catching Olympic buildings in the area. And while Japan’s Banna Park Birdwatch isn’t an egg store, we just couldn’t leave it out. Birdwatchers on Ishigaki Island can view their avian friends from the comfort of an enormous egg. Visitors can even climb up to the top level of the egg to get some fresh air and a view from the broken tip of the shell.

 

Check out the Source!

Sayaka Kajita Ganz- Recycling Artist

Sayaka Kajita Ganz was born in Japan but now she’s living and working in Indiana, USA. She use discarded objects, mainly made in plastic, like kitchen tools, hangers, etc, to create stunning sculptures inspired by animals and nature. She says about her work “It is a way for me to contemplate and remind myself that even if there is conflict right now, there is a way for all the pieces to fit together.”.

 

Pictures and information courtesy of Look In Art.

Packaging Mockups

Rapid packaging prototypes

Expression.!

there are different ways of expressing a thought. Lets explore some........ . ...

InsideDigital.org

INTELLIGENCE FOR BRAND MARKETERS

Chris Jones

SEO & Internet Marketing Consultant

dweinberg415

A painting a day for a year of San Francisco

Theme Showcase

Find the perfect theme for your blog.

EBSQ: Art Meets Blog v2.0

This is the official Blog for the EBSQ Self-Representing Artists Community, where you'll find news, reviews, site announcements, and of course, a generous helping of art!

Colleen Dubois Photography~Blog

Colleen Dubois Photography

My Day Out With An Angel

Where The Angels Meet To Post Messages

Life as it is

Personal Shopper, Gamer, Mother, Friend, Food Aficionado, Movie Lover, Critic, Loving Wife and Sister

phusathi

The essence of an eighteen year old's mind spilled on paper

Evelina Galli

USE THINGS. LOVE PEOPLE. DON'T SWITCH.

holjon2110

Fashion, Fashion Advisor, What-To-Wear, Trends, Style Inspiration

A.M.M. Fine Art

Asha Murthy MacDonald Fine Art

artcarloscesaralves

Contemporary - Abstract - Mixed Medium Artist

Teedipity

Frugal Inspiring Craft Idea's For The Home And Yard

Stories by Natalie

Studying, Partying, Graduating, Travelling & Grad Job-ing

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 2,050 other followers

%d bloggers like this: