Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts

Wednesday

World Most Outrageous Art That You Can Eat..!!

well I have always wanted to swim in a bowl of chocolate pudding, but I don’t know how safe that would be. Two artists, Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle come together to realize my childhood dreams to dive into a pool of pudding...

Paris-based artists, Pierre Javelle and Akiko Ida, a husband and wife team, present a manufactured micro universe, part Toy Story, part Candy Land, populated with diminutive humanoid characters engaged in a range of ordinary and extraordinary activities. Since the project inception in 2002, the series has grown to over 60 images.

Pierre Javelle and Akiko Ida have morphed multiple genres of photography, including micro-photography, culinary art, portraiture and landscape. The theme involves action, ranging from sporting scenes to warfare, taking place in carefully staged, fantastic, food settings. In each diptych, the first image introduces the subjects in an uncertain setting. The second panel reveals the scene in totality, to an unexpected, often amusing end.

Through light-hearted and playful arrangement, the artists’ work intelligently probes fundamental questions of human perception, and how meaning is constructed and manipulated through images.

And now see some bizzare creations with food which you can eat..!!
















Tell us which art do you enjoy the most...to eat ! :)

Sunday

Amazing Radiological Scanned Images..!!

A radiologist has turned scans of his patients' ears, teeth,eyes,noses and other body parts into works of art.

'Curves in the ear'

Kai-hung Fung maps various organs using 3D computed tomography (CT) scans.

'Moire Eggs'

After feeding the data into a computer, he adds colour to his works using a method he invented
called the 'rainbow technique'. But he makes no other alterations, preferring a pure picture of
what body parts really look like.

'Teeth'


He said: "The pictures I create are generated directly from the medical 3D workstation,
representing what I see on it. I do not use software such as Adobe Photoshop to further change the image.

'What lies behind our nose'

"My aim is to preserve the direct relationship between the data and the artwork.

"It is a true integration of art, science and technology and can be studied both scientifically and
enjoyed as a visual art.


'Eye in the big hole'

"The imagery is packed with information. Each line or point represents specific anatomical
structures in the body in normal or diseased state. It creates an unusual perspective."

'Nose from the inside'

Since he started producing his works at Pamela Youde Nethersole Easter Hospital in Hong Kong they have been shown in galleries across the world.

Proceeds from sales of his pieces are donated to charity.

Monday

Artificial Wonder - Amazing Paddy Arts !!

A group of farmers have created these extraordinary 'murals' by planting rice in different colors in Japanese paddy fields. A group of farmers put together these extraordinary murals - by planting different colored rice in giant paddy fields. SOLENT The stunning creations emerge in the late summer months after the rice plants have had chance to grow in the fields.

Images that have adorned the village fields include a Japanese Sengoku warrior on horseback, a
giant frog and a butterfly

The farmers create the murals by planting purple and yellow-leafed kodaimai rice along with their local green-leafed tsugaru roman variety

In Inakadate the art covers 15,000 square metres but anyone wanting to catch a glimpse has to climb the village's castle tower

The farmers first sketch out their designs on computers so that they know exactly where the rice needs to be planted
Paddy art' was started in the village 16 years ago as a project to revitalise the local economy

Another famous paddy art venue is the city of Yonezawa, in northern Japan, where this year's design shows fictional 16th-century samurai warrior Naoe Kanetsugu and his wife, Osen
Each year a different design is on show and more than 15,000 visitors travel to see the creation
The most famous work is grown in the village of Inakadate, 600 miles north of Toyko, where the tradition began in 1993

The rice is planted in May and the creations are at their best in September

A group of farmers have created 'murals' by planting rice in different colours in Japanese paddy
fields

The creations emerge in the late summer months after the rice plants have had a chance to grow. But the farmers first sketch out their designs on computers so that they know exactly where the rice needs to be planted. The most famous work is grown in the village of Inakadate, 600 miles north of Toyko, where the tradition began in 1993.

Thursday

Amazing Sculpture By The Sea !

The Sculpture by the Sea coastal exhibition at Cottesloe Beach in Perth, Australia. The annual exhibition features 62 sculptures on the beach this year...

A Crab In The Works by Gordan Mitchell.

Unplugged by Robin Yakinthou.

Some sculptures incorporate the natural features of Cottesloe beach.

Up close view of Cube Stack by Jennifer Cochrane.

A young girl runs up to the Lifesavers sculpture by Denis Pepper.

Lifesavers by Denis Pepper.

Two swimmers swim past Spheres by Sophie Hoppe.

Parabola by Philip Spelman.

A young child is photographed with Line In The Sand by John Hutchinson.

Bathers sit around Balancing The Books by Stephen King

Development by Daniel Clemmett.

Bathers sit amongst Hollow Promise - Cottesloe by Gary Deirmendjian

Hollow Promise - Cottesloe stands out against the horizon.

Hollow Promise - Cottesloe as seen from above.

Antipodean recruits by Len Zuks.

Members of the public admire Impact - Cubes (300) by Mauris Raudzins and Together Series by Ron Gomboc ..


Check out some more weird sculpture HERE where I have posted few days before .....


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