Lots and lots of amazing homemade forts found on BOOOOOOOM.
Archive for the 'sculpture' Category
Hahaha. Russian engineers have created a full set of fake weaponry which it sells to some countries, to fool other countries spy satellites and spy-planes. Via

Passive Agressive Anger Release Machine
Published October 14, 2009 DIY , sculpture , varia Leave a Comment‘Passive Aggressive Anger Release Machine’ is an interactive sculpture by Yarisal and Kublitz. Experience the most satisfying feeling when a piece of China breaks into million pieces . All you have to do is insert a coin, and a piece of China will Slowly move forwards and fall into the bottom of the machine, breaking, and leaving you happy and relieved of anger. Via

Lovely performances with food – in an erotic way. Becquemin and Sagot have been developing artwork around the theme of consumption as a prism for understanding the relationship between society and the world.

In the academy days De Beijer was a fanatic sketch artist, where he used scale models and staged sets as study material for drawings and paintings.
His first official complete photo series is a clear step to take the models and staged sets as a starting point for manipulated photography. Since then De Beijer has done a number of seven projects, all of them built from the ground up in his studio. Via

A few pictures from the 2008 National Gingerbread House Competition.

An edition in the ongoing series ‘Methods & Apparati’ for Social Facilitation and Mood Elevation. By Keetra Dean Dixon.

Based on his ideas on transposition and movement the artist Peter Jansen uses shapes of the human body to create energetic spaces. Via

Amazing paper engineering by this Australian artist. Through his business, Paperform, he has been dedicated to making pop-up books and paper creations seriously for about 5 years now for a variety of applications including magazines, advertising, fashion, packaging and fine art. Via

This giant pop-up was created to promote the new Ambi Pur deo ‘Pink Flowers’. It was installed behind doors of public toilets. Via

This work by Rebecca Ridsel was an installation, set up as a lab experiment in progress, complete with scalpels, lab coats, needles and a microscope. Piles of dicarded, cut-up craft objects lay about the desk, some with their innards seeping out, others rearranged, Frankenstein-style.

Yamamoto was educated in traditional Japanese woodcarving. This is specially seen in his paintings and drawings where the vanishing point is dissolved and depth and surface melts into each other in an optical illusion.

Tired of seeing the abandoned eyesore on a daily basis, artist Jennifer Marsh decided to cover this old gas station in 5,000 square feet of fabric. Via



