Wednesday 26 April 2017

Anamorphic art

The Illusive Cat, 2016. Anamorphic sculpture. Oil paint on plaster, stainless steel.

Childhood, 2017. Copper, stainless steel, resin, magnetism.


The Hand That Caught Me Falling, 2016. Bronze, wood and chrome.




Anamorphic Frog, 2016. Bronze and stainless steel.


Brilliant sculptures created by London-based artist Jonty Hurwitz.

Tuesday 25 April 2017

Malaria No More UK


Shameless plug of some wonderful work created by some of our youngest creatives, designed to raise awareness on this World Malaria Day.

We're extremely proud of the work and even more proud of them.

Well done guys.

Mind blowing

Self Reflected, 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The entire Self Reflected microetching under
white light. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The visual cortex, the region located at the back
of the brain that processes visual information.

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016, Greg Dunn
and Brian Edwards. The thalamus and basal ganglia, sorting senses, initiating movement,
and making decisions. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected, 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016, Greg Dunn
and Brian Edwards. The entire Self Reflected microetching under violet and
white light. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016, Greg Dunn
and Brian Edwards. Raw colorized microetching data from the reticular formation.

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The pons, a region involved in movement and
implicated in consciousness. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The parietal gyrus where movement
and vision are integrated. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The motor and parietal cortex, regions involved in
movement and sensation, respectively. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The midbrain, an area that carries out diverse
functions in reward, eye movement, hearing, attention, and movement.
(photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The laminar structure of the cerebellum,
a region involved in movement and proprioception
(calculating where your body is in space).

Self Reflected (detail), 22K gilded microetching, 96″ X 130″, 2014-2016,
Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards. The brainstem and cerebellum, regions that
control basic body and motor functions. (photo by Greg Dunn and Will Drinker)



This incredible piece of work was created by artist and neuroscientist Dr. Gregg Dunn, along with collaborator Dr. Brian Edwards.

It's an intricate cross section of the human brain created out of thousands of layers of gold leaf that took almost two years to complete. And when you look at the insane level of detail it's no wonder.

It's called 'Self Reflected' and is currently on display at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.

Giant friendly octopus becomes immersive children's playground








This is amazing.

Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman has created a children's playground housed within a giant friendly octopus. The piece is in the centre of Yantian, Shenzhen and is titled 'The Kraken' after the mythical sea creature. It was created as part of Vanke Group's 'One City' development project.

Thursday 13 April 2017

Saw this and it's fucking weird


Created for the Banff Centre, Canada's home for artistic learning and creation, and directed by Rodrigo Garcia Saiz.

The piece is called 'Things you can't unthink' and it's definitely a WTF kind of one.

Digital artist reimagines Picasso paintings as modern sculptures











The series is titled 'Mimic' and is created by Pakistan-based digital artist Omar Aqil.

Absolutely brilliant work.