Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Shadow Stealing



"Ztunnel is a performance done by ZEVS in Eindhoven, the Netherlands last weekend. It includes 'invisible spraypaint', arresting passersby to steal their shadow and silhouette and blacklight. It was commissioned by MU and Glow Festival is will be visible until November 19th at sundown."

Morning After Portraits






"Andy Diaz Hope deconstructs his own digital photographs and painstakingly reassembles the original image in a mosaic of gelatin pill capsules, each containing small portions from several original prints. As a continuation of his Morning After Portraits series, Diaz Hope has turned his lens on the hidden landscapes of drug culture—from high school hideaways to psychiatric institutions. “

"MORNING AFTER PORTRAITS

Our society focuses on the glamorous night before--the parties, the clothes, the highs. Magazines dedicate countless 4 color pages to the beauty of the night. . . but what of the next morning? What of the hangovers, the headaches, the depleted serotonin receptors and the bags under the eyes that have no designer label?

The morning after portraits are portraits of people in front of their medicine cabinets or in their local pharmacies with hangovers, migraines, morning sickness and other maladies self-inflicted or bestowed by nature.

When viewed from afar, the portraits can be read as a whole image. As one moves closer, the image begins to break down and the individual capsule pixels become more dominant. As we continue to find new ways to modify our appearance and our psychological and social presence through legal and illegal drugs, we begin to dissipate the whole that we were born as. We are no longer a sum of our natural history, but a sum of our natural history plus our self selected recreational and medical regimes. We look to our medicine cabinets and stashes to attain social and physical super powers. To stay up longer, show no pain or sorrow and look ageless in the process.

The series looks behind the mirror to expose the inner workings of our medicine cabinets and our relationship to them as our doctor, psychologist, cosmetician and spiritual healer. It appeals to the viewer’s voyeuristic desire to look inside another’s hidden cabinet of frailties and insecurities. To see another’s vulnerabilities through the medicines they take strips away that person’s invincibility while bolstering one’s own."

http://www.andydiazhope.com/

More Art From Computer Parts












"Ann Smith knows exactly what to do with old electronic parts. Instead of gathering dust, her little creations brighten up the office and don't require any reason for existence other than "just because"

http://www.burrowburrow.com/robots.html

Animal Fruits




Japanese Train with a cool Interior Design


With the results looking nicer than most nurseries, the Japanese have taken the idea of ‘child-friendly public transport’ to the next level. They were designed by Eiji Mitooka, the artistic force behind a couple of regional trains which travel on a daily basis on the 14.3km Kishigawa line in Japan. The train contains hundreds of toys, TV screens showing cartoons, immaculately clean wooden flooring and cots for younger children.

Pencil Crayon Fence


All I can say is... COOL

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

River Road

"Next year it will be no road, it will be water again."
Henk Hofstra's blue road in Drachten (Holland) stretches 1000 meters long.




Road Kill Toys




A toy designer has come up with a gory end for teddy bears and other cuddly animal toys.

The first to be launched is Twitch, the Roadkill Teddy, which comes complete with opaque plastic body bag to keep the maggots out and attached to its twitching toe is an identity bag giving details of its demise.

According to its tag it was run over over by a milk float last Thursday, near the Hangar Lane Giratory system in London.

The toy's innards and blood can be stuffed in and out of his body. A zip on each side contains the blood and guts. Its eyes are goggling, tongue is lolling around and a tyre print runs across its back.

Toy creator Adam Arber, 33, from London, said: 'I got the idea from looking at my mother-in-law's dog which is quite ugly and I thought it would make a great toy. A friend of mine had taken some pictures of road kill and the two things gelled into one idea.'

He said he thought the toys, which cost £25 ($50), would appeal to people with a sense of humour and 'probably not anyone easily upset'.

Typwriter Part Sculpture

Pencil Bench


Boex 3D Creative Solutions designed this award winning quirky bench. The seat is made up of 1600 pencils which are individually sprung. Each pencil can be removed and used.

Clockwork Insects

"Insect Lab is an artist studio that customizes real insects with antique watch parts and electronic components. Offering specimens that come in many shapes, sizes and colors; each insect is individually adorned, each is one of a kind and unique.

Borrowing from both science fiction and science fact, Insect Lab's customized insects are a celebration of natural and manmade function. Specimens are presented in custom black shadow boxes or glass dome display, allowing for presentation anywhere."




Scooter Menorah


Celebrate Hannukah in style with this scooter menorah from the Jewish Museum.

Liquid Logos


Landscape Rings







Can't wait to get one.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Book Tree



Don’t feel like getting a Christmas tree? Just create your own by simply rearranging your books.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Interesting Sculptures

Italian artist Simone Racheli makes sculptures that are made to resemble raw meat. I think they are pretty disgusting and grewsome but the fact that they look so realistic is what makes it good art.




Chocolate Fashion

Chocolate World



Japan's Otemae Confectionery College professor Hiroshi Matsui displays a 3-meter diameter chocolate made globe, weighing 800kg, at the college's festival November 10, 2007 in Osaka, western Japan. Matsui and students dotted some 35,000 colored chocolate truffles, in 3-cm diameter, on a 3-meter diameter core chocolate ball to shape a globe, which warns the global warming to be melting down over the temperature of 40-degree Celsius.

Musical Road



This is a creative way of generating a 'melody' by simply driving your car over a grooved stretch of road at the correct speed.

The 'melody road', can be seen above and the grooves are between 6 and 12mm apart: the narrower the interval, the higher the pitch. These stretches of road, each playing a different tune, can currently be found in 3 places in Japan - Hokkaido, Wakayama and Gunma - with the optimum musical speed being a depressingly slow 28mph.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Sony Commercial + It's Making

The Commercial


The Making:


The way it was made is a lot more time consuming etc. then I thought it would be!

Sand Art



Ilana Yahav is a sand animation artist. Using only her fingers, Ilana draws with sand on a glass table. She uses this original technique in the creation of advertisements and image building clips.

Bridge


Bridge in Amsterdam

Eco Graffiti





Eco-minded street artist Edina Tokodi is putting a new spin on green guerilla tactics in the trendy art enclave of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Tokodi’s site-specific moss installations of prancing animal figures and camouflage outgrowths are the talk of a local urban neighborhood typically accustomed to gallery hype and commercial real estate take-overs. Unlike the market-driven art featured in sterile, white box galleries, the work of Tokodi is meant to be touched, felt, and in turn touch you in the playful ways that her animated installations call to mind a more familiar, environmentally friendly state in the barren patches of urban existence.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Creative Recycling of your old PC

"Given the Moore's law that the power of computers doubles every 24 months, we end up with a lot of useless devices and obsolete hardware, that you sure can recycle in a normal way, but it's much more fun to recycle it in a wild and unusual ways! Let's see how to give a new life to the computing zombies of yesteryear."

http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2007/10/new-ways-to-play-with-old-hardware.html

bike out of the hard drives:


Old electronic parts can be re-used in earrings:


Running Shoes out of the old keyboard (must be really uncomfortable)


great use of an old mouse in a bathroom:


Old monitor husk as a cage for a hamster:


The "Crucifix" wall is more rugged, but perhaps more meaningful. The monitors constantly run the most often searched words on Google News - bringing to mind some pseudo-spiritual ideas about "living" words & virtual martyrdom.




and last but not least

Sandy Smith arranges a bunch of functioning and dead monitors into walls and sculptures, achieving some sublime effects. Take for example this "Mauritian Sunset" with its rather complex glow:


Fully Loaded chair made of shotgun shells


The fully loaded chair, made from 450 12-gauge shotgun shells has a "massaging texture" due to the protruding brass tips

Wire Lamborghini




"The work questions the combustion engine, celebrates bicycle efficiency and the striking design of the Lamborghini arguably one of the most iconic super cars of all time, as well as Wilson and Radcliffes commitment to clever and thoughtful craftsmanship. Wilson + Radcliffe are deeply passionate about cars and bikes and have seen each other¹s work at various exhibitions over the last few years. Artcars gave them the opportunity to collaborate on this project. Walk the plank commissioned the piece of work for the uk¹s first ART CAR parade that was held in Manchester last recently."

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Book Autopsies

Brian Dettmer carves into books revealing the artwork inside, creating complex layered three-dimensional sculptures.

http://centripetalnotion.com/2007/09/13/13:26:26 (more images)









Lego Bible

http://www.thebricktestament.com/index.html

I hope no one finds this offensive but I thought it was pretty darn cool that someone took the time to do it. There are a few sacrilegious things on there that people might not like but generally its interesting. It's the old testament told through lego images.


Friday, October 5, 2007

LED Street Art

Just beautiful!



"LED Throwies are an inexpensive way to add color to any ferromagnetic surface in your neighborhood. A Throwie consists of a lithium battery, a 10mm diffused LED and a rare-earth magnet taped together"

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Gun Shaped Items

I know this does not relate to my usual blog topic but I sure found this interesting and the amout of stuff that is as silly is just overwhelming.


A gun shaped blow dryer? Something seems really wrong about this especially since well... you point a blowdryer or should I say gundryer at your head.



This is another absurd item I found. Kids get suspended for pointing "gun" shaped chicken fingers (or was it a nugget) and going bang. Can you imagine the uproar with this ruler? Plus what does a gun have to do with measuring?



And of course the last item... Nothing matches up to this one:



This unfortunate toy gun has a whistle on the end of the barrel.

It's a toy where the basketball spins and opens up when you pull the trigger. As it spins it plays music. Oh yeah, it's got a whistle that you play by sticking the barrel of this gun-shaped toy in your mouth!

Colour Coded books

Chris Cobb, a local San Francisco artist did something amazing to a bookshop called Adobe Books- he arranged every single one of the 20,000 books by color. The project is called "There is Nothing Wrong in This Whole Wide World" and is based on a simple idea:

"Even though there is so much to be unhappy about in this world, we should try to create something amazing and beautiful and interesting despite all of the problems." Chris Cobb

Chris and a team of 16 volunteers stayed up all night (ten hours, several pizzas and 30 bottles of water later) and arranged all of the books by hand. Inside every book there is a tag saying where it belongs.



Reverse Graffiti



Take the time to watch this to the end so you will actually understand what is going on. It's quite an interesting medium and what the city workers did with it is as well. It really was not causing any harm aside from being beautiful

The process of creation

Just something interesting I found a while ago. I cut the ending out of it because it is not as powerfull as this segment (sorry about the bad edit I just used a screenshot).

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Decorating the City

Here is a collection of street art from around the world. I have descriptions for each image and its location but I will post that up later.











Food can be art too!

Hungry Yet?










Someones Junk and Someone elses Treasure

Cute mechanical sculptures made by welding discarded kitchenwares such as spoons, kettles, flasks, can openers and others.






Crazy Crayons

Look what you can do with a standard pack of crayola crayons and some time.

An Urban Warning

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Inside Out Teddies

“Think of your favorite teddy bear. Now imagine it’s been ripped open, gutted, and turned inside-out. That’s what Kent Rogowski’s Bears series has done to the iconic stuffed animals of our childhoods. In his recently published book and show at Foley Gallery, Rogowski mangles our memories and, at the same time, makes them all the more real.”

They actually become quite cute when you look at them for a while. I took on making one myself and am mid way through the process of sowing it back together. I will post some images of mine but for now you can enjoy the real deal.











A City Without Ads

A city stripped of advertising. No Posters. No flyers. No ads on buses. No ads on trains. No Adshels, no 48-sheets, no nothing.

It sounds like an Adbusters editorial: an activist’s dream. But in São Paulo, Brazil, the dream has become a reality.

In September last year, the city’s populist right-wing mayor, Gilberto Kassab, passed the so-called Clean City laws. Fed up with the “visual pollution” caused by the city’s 8,000 billboard sites, many of them erected illegally, Kassab proposed a law banning all outdoor advertising. The skyscraper-sized hoardings that lined the city’s streets would be wiped away at a stroke. And it was not just billboards that attracted his wrath: all forms of outdoor advertising were to be prohibited, including ads on taxis, on buses—even shopfronts were to be restricted, their signs limited to 1.5 metres for every 10 metres of frontage. “It is hard in a city of 11 million people to find enough equipment and personnel to determine what is and isn’t legal,” reasoned Kassab, “so we have decided to go all the way.”

The law was hailed by writer Roberto Pompeu de Toledo as “a rare victory of the public interest over private, of order over disorder, aesthetics over ugliness, of cleanliness over trash… For once, all that is accustomed to coming out on top in Brazil has lost.”

Already the law has led to some strange discoveries. Because the site-ing of billboards was unregulated, many poor people readily accepted cash to have a poster site in their gardens or even in front of their homes. With their removal, a new city is emerging: “Last week, on my way to work, I ‘discovered’ a house,” says Piqueira. “It had been covered by a big billboard for years so I never even knew what it looked like.” The removal of the posters has “revealed an architecture that we must learn to be proud of, instead of hiding,” says de Marco.







Tunnel House

Isn’t it great how creativity kicks in when times running out. Take for example this incredible and beautiful installation by artists Dan Havel and Dean Ruck a few months before this house was to be demolished…. They saw any opportunity to do something freaking crazy cool to a space that was going to be destroyed and turned this old house into a trippy wooden warp zone!









Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Figurines being Smashed

These figurines being smashed is the perfect example of destroying things to create art. Unfortunately I forgot where I got these images from so there is no information about them.











Border Wall VollyBall

Taken from Anthem Magazine:

Even from Google Earth you can see it's big, but it's worthless. It's like a Zen koan: What do you call a transnational barrier wall that isn't? I was thinking someone should do something, transform it into something functional. Like a net. Yes, it's not a wall, it's a 3.4 billion dollar net over which we will play the world's first ever game of transnational border volleyball. We will ignore the warnings of friends and family and head to San Diego's notoriously toxic Imperial Beach to play volleyball with our Mexican neighbors. Maybe we can briefly turn a spectacle of segregation and fear into an international symbol of cross-cultural play.

Chair Installation

This amazing art installation was made by Colombian sculptor Doris Salcedo for the International Instanbul Biennale in 2003. She used over 1,550 chairs stacked on an empty lot between two buildings!"

"Doris Salcedo makes sculptures and installations that function as political and mental archaeology, using domestic materials charged with significance and suffused with meanings accumulated over years of use in everyday life. Salcedo often takes specific historical events as her point of departure, conveying burdens and conflicts with precise and economical means."

Underwater Sculpture Gallery

The Underwater Sculpture Gallery in Grenada, West Indies is a project started in May 2006 by sculptor Jason Taylor, with the support of the Grenadian Ministry of Tourism and Culture. This is a unique artistic enterprise, celebrating Caribbean culture and highlighting environmental processes, such as coral reef re-generation.
The Underwater Sculpture Park also explores the ever-changing relationships of Art and the environment, whilst providing a unique and fascinating marine park for scuba diving and snorkelling







There use to be a site for all this where you could watch a video but it is no longer active.

Landmine Art

On Sunday 1st April. artist and activist Will St. Leger placed 100 fake 'landmines' made from stenciled metal plates in park around Dublin, Ireland.

Will explains: "The reason for doing this was to get people asking themselves "what if the world I walked in was littered with landmines?" They're nearly all gone now, the Police took away most of them when a tourist called the emergency number to report 'Landmines'. Afterwards, I wondered who the people of Laos, Cambodia and Iraq gonna call when they step on real landmine?"

My Personal Art Project


Old- April 27th

Ok, so I came up with this idea after collecting a bunch of cigarette packs for another project I never did. I took a look at them today and I have a mountain of them (so far 30 packs- I need a couple hundred probably). The new idea is to create a full skeleton made out of them or even a human shape with possibly the vital organs that smoking damages. I dont know how I plan to do it because I want it to be 3D and for it to work it has to be hanging or something. By the time I complete it I also want to quit smoking. If anyone has any ideas or suggestions on making this project realistic or wants to donate some empty packs just post!

-RECENT UPDATE-

I thought it was about time to see how far I have gotten... I have only 102 packs. I tossed a lot out into the garbage at one point.

Here is the Math behind 102 packs.

There are 98 packs with 25 Smokes in a pack.
There are 4 with 20 smokes in a pack.

98 x 25 = 2450 smokes
4 x 20 = 80 smokes

Grand Total = 2530 ciggarettes.

Here is the info on each package:

Toxic emissions: Tar 10-29mg, Nicotine 1.0-2.2mg, Carbon Monoxide 12-29mg, Formaldehyde 0.041-0.12mg, Hydrogen cyanide 0.087-0.25mg, Benzene 0.039-0.085mg.

Now Multiply that by 102...

Thats a ton of junk to put into your lungs.

Me Blogging?

Since a few people have mentioned I should create my own blog instead of posting all the stuff up on facebook I am finally taking the leap. Why? Well I have 43 notes on facebook as of right now. It's a bit much.

You might think the name Destroy to Create is a little weird but the reason I chose it is fairly simple. Most of the art I post up is street art or things that in the end will get destroyed and the artists know it will. Well that or it is what the average person believes is destroying a standard object. In my eyes it is not destruction and hopefully in yours it wont be either.

Most of the stuff that will be on here is going to be gathered from sites, other peoples blogs, and the news. If I don't post the whole thing then I will give a link for it.

Enjoy,
SJ

Here is one of my favorite things I found. It is what got me started on posting cool art.