If I could get these at Walmart, they would be my go-to Halloween hand out.
Showing posts with label skulls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skulls. Show all posts
Friday, October 30, 2015
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Sculpture: Octopus Skull Jug
Octopus Skull Jug by Mitchell Grafton
Not sure what I would use this jug for, and yet, I'd buy it in a heartbeat. It's things like this that are the reason I'm not married.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Monday, January 12, 2015
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Papercraft: Vince Human Skull
The Vince Human Skull is a sculptural skull made of recycled cardboard. The skull consists of laser-cut cross sections that ship flat for at-home assembly. It is available in several sizes and colors.
Labels:
cardboard,
merchandise,
papercraft,
skulls
Monday, November 3, 2014
Posters: Dia De Los Muertos
ITC Baskerville series of posters constructed almost entirely from glyphs.
Labels:
dia de los muertos,
posters,
skulls,
typography
Friday, October 31, 2014
Monday, October 6, 2014
Friday, September 5, 2014
Link Round-Up: September 5, 2014
Prints available for purchase from RedBubble.
"Based on the classic Mucha poster Zodiac, Grand Bazar and Nouvelles Galleries. Colored in Corel Painter. All of the type is names for the structures of the skull. Even the curling white decorative lines at the bottom are actually type (though it’s hard to see at this size). If all goes well, I’ll do posters for other Sherlock characters as well, each in the style of a classic art nouveau poster."
News: Florida contemporary art display will feature hacked celebrity nude pics in an exhibit entitled "Fear Google." Personally, I think "Fear the Cloud" might have been a little closer to the mark.
Margaret Atwood's next novel won't be published until 2114: "Atwood has just been named as the first contributor to an astonishing new public artwork. The Future Library project, conceived by the award-winning young Scottish artist Katie Paterson, began, quietly, this summer, with the planting of a forest of 1,000 trees in Nordmarka, just outside Oslo. It will slowly unfold over the next century. Every year until 2114, one writer will be invited to contribute a new text to the collection, and in 2114, the trees will be cut down to provide the paper for the texts to be printed – and, finally, read."
Wait, why doesn’t this D&D Viewmaster include a slide of the party sitting in a tavern, bickering about which quest to go on?
Water Tank Project Transforms NYC Roofs Into Museums In The Name of Conservation
We suppose the phrase “outlawed taxidermy” should probably frighten us, yet we find ourselves strangely intrigued...
What happens when you break a sculpture in a gallery Gallery patron sits on bench in gallery, turns out bench was artwork, bench breaks? Ethical and financial panics ensue. The When You Work at a Museum tumblr is full of stories like these (and other entertaining indignities)
Labels:
art nouveau,
link round-up,
posters,
prints,
round-up,
skulls,
television
Thursday, August 7, 2014
Sculpture: Bas-Relief Skulls
Bas-Relief Skulls by New Jersey-based Gregory Halili
On exhibit at Silverlens Galleries in Manila and Nancy Hoffman Gallery in New York.
Gregory Halili creates stunning bas-relief carvings of human skulls
delicately hand-carved and painted on the mother of pearl interior of gold-lip and black-lip oyster shells collected from his native Philippines. He begins by carving the images by hand, then he uses oil paint to dab muted tones of color onto the iridescent
surface.
Monday, April 28, 2014
Sculpture: Bonsai Skull
Bonsai Skull Treehouse
Ocoze
is a young Japanese artist raised in the Hiroshima-prefec and fond of
nature, dioramas and metric analysis. He is the man that gave hands to
the amazing “bon-kei” houses that rocked the web a couple of years ago,
formerly part of the Takanori Aiba duo.
Today Ocoze is doing it all by himself and is taking it to a next
level. This is his latest work. If you're near Berlin, you can
see his work first-hand during The Woods art show at Strychnin Gallery, which began April 12th.
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Installation: What Will You Leave Behind?
Nino Sarabutra covered a gallery floor with over a hundred thousand miniature porcelain skulls for visitors to trod upon freely. The whole macabre display is intended to remind its audience that each step we take brings us one step closer to our own demise, and that none of us know which of those steps will be our last.
Labels:
installation,
skulls
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Sculpture: Very Hungry God
"Very Hungry God" by New Delhi-based artist Subodh Gupta
"My work was conceived to be shown in a church in Barbes on the outskirts of Paris which is largely inhabited by an immigrant population. I made the work in response to the stories I read in the news about how soup kitchens in Paris were serving food with pork so that Muslims would not eat it. It was a strange and twisted form of charity that did not continue for long but raised conflicting ideas of giving and the way we have become now.
Outside the church I served vegetarian daal soup as a form of “prasad” (in India when you go to a temple or a guduwara you are offered food with the blessing). I liked the mix of the Catholic church and my intervention using a symbol that many artists have used before – the skull – and its many connotations.”
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Photography: Skull Camera
A functional camera constructed from a skull.
Designed to study the beauty of decay, the homemade 4”x5” camera is built from aluminum, titanium, brass, silver, gem stones, and the 150 year-old skull
of a thirteen year old girl. Light enters through the "third eye," exposing
the film in the middle of the skull. It's either grisly or beautiful, but the debate over which is what art's all about.
Labels:
photography,
skulls
Friday, January 3, 2014
Link Round-Up: January 3, 2014
Digital artist Tahar Abroudjameur created this haunting image of a skull-like nebula by re-imagining a Hubble photo of two colliding spiral galaxies. Called "The Universe Is In Us," it's one of many contributions to the NASA remix project.
16 New York City Instagrammers You Should Follow
Alien or YouTubian? Intricate crop circle appears in California.
CLICKittyCAT is a hand-drawn webcomic that satirizes the photography profession.
Guillermo del Toro Shares 14 Creative Insights From His Spectacular Cabinet Of Curiosities Sketch Book
Natural Palettes is an awesome new Tumblr devoted to matching colors from the Pantone spectrum with gorgeous natural landscapes. Color aficionado will love and both simple and striking scenes from nature. It’s easy to get lost scrolling through the collection.
Watch Music Turn Into A 3D-Printed Augmented Reality Sculpture
Wired has an interesting design piece on how Home Depot has improved the bucket.
Labels:
collage,
link round-up,
round-up,
skulls,
space
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Sculpture: Ecce Animal
"Ecce Animal" by Diddo
According to Diddo, this piece “challenges assumptions about human nature, specifically the
tension between biology and society, and how it defines our humanity.”
The compression molded skull is made from entirely street sourced
cocaine and gelatin, and gave the artist the opportunity to work with,
he says, “some very bright people from the world of pharmacy.” I'm not sure what parrt of the world it would be legal to own this, but it's certainly spooky.
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