Much like a ring master or circus performer attempts to train a wild animal, artist Rob Tarbell applied similar principles to taming smoke into the form of old fashioned circus scenes. To achieve the images, Tarbell mounts paper to the ceiling (in a metal garage with fire extinguishers nearby), then burns credit cards and old 35mm film below it, directing the smoke into the desired shapes. He uses his wife and friends as models for the human portions of the pieces and pictures of horses and elephants for the animals. The ghostly images under the name Smoke Rings will be on display from March 11- April 12, 2013 in a circus themed group exhibition at Roanoke, Virginia’s Marginal Arts Festival. [Read more...]
DJ Dalai Lama: His Holiness Bumps That Bass
Look out Deadmau5 and Tiësto, there’s a new DJ in the house! The only thing better than looking at this awesome collection of paintings by Arotin Hartounian is imagining what the enlightened mixes of His Holiness might sound like. Hartounian, a California native, who often uses the canvas of Vans shoes for his art, has created a set of paintings of the Dalai Lama as we’ve never seen him before- scratching a turn table atop the Himalayas! See that familiar joyful face in pure bliss as he drops tracks that bring the world to enlightenment. [Read more...]
Nature vs Man: Cross Section Diagrams of the Future
Most of us have heard the thought-provoking words by Environmentalist Terri Swearingen, “We are living on this planet as if we had another one to go to.” Some are moved to make changes; others just shrug thinking “They’ll figure something out.” But what if scientists are right and the polar ice caps do melt and cause the seas to flood the lands? What might the world look like? Oregon based artist Josh Keyes shares his predictions in a unique, textbook diagram style. His paintings show cross section slices through possible future scenes with land animals wading through water next to an octopus, 3 headed tigers, and circus animals roaming the graffitied streets. [Read more...]
Collages from Our Wildly Beautiful Universe
Welcome to a strange world where the ordinary laws of physics hold no ground and the imagination is free to conjure fascinating scenes of wondrous beauty. Galaxies seem to hide in ribbons of unknown wavelengths, doors open in familiar terrestrial objects, and Newtonian gravity is non-existent. Such is the impression I get while viewing the fantastic collages of Bryan Olson, an artist from North Carolina who dissects vintage paper-based imagery and reassembles it into the mysteriously foreign yet familiar worlds you see here. [Read more...]
Fluorescent Animals Painted On Celestial Maps
“In my world the animals are God-like, sublime and ethereal in their luminescence” states London-based artist Louise McNaught. Though all of her work shares a common faunal theme, each piece is refreshing and bold. She chooses neon acrylic coloring so that the viewer’s eyes are immediately drawn in awe to the beautiful creature before them. By elevating the status of animals in her work, McNaught hopes to inspire people to think about mankind’s delicate relationship with nature. [Read more...]
Sculptural, Data-Based Basket Weaving
There’s a long running joke going around about earning a “wasted” college degree in basket weaving… often including some other equally “useless” factor. “Underwater” basket weaving often tops the list. It’s a good thing for us that Nathalie Miebach didn’t listen to these silly presumptions and combined a dual curriculum of Astronomy (learnt at Harvard University) and basket weaving (studied with a local artisan). The result was the highly complex sculptures we have here, literally weaving together astronomical, weather and climate change data into her work. [Read more...]
Trees in Nature with White Canvas Backgrounds
It never ceases to amaze me how much the network of branches on trees so closely resembles the circulatory system of mammals and living in Redwood territory I find myself in awe of trees all the time. Photographer Myoung Ho Lee captured the beauty of trees in a unique and tricky way. With his production crew, ropes, bars, and cranes, he created a canvas backdrop for different trees in all four seasons at varying times of day. The largest canvases were 60 x 45 feet and with a little retouching to remove the ropes and cranes, Lee created the illusion that the white backdrop is hovering behind the tree. By separating the tree from it’s natural landscape in the square of the canvas, but still revealing that landscape in the border, he focuses the viewer’s eyes right on the majestic qualities of the tree itself. [Read more...]
Tiny Worlds Through a Porthole
You may have made dioramas in your younger school years, cutting pieces of paper to into layered shapes or building small models, later to be viewed through the end of an old shoebox; but these examples from artist Patrick Jacobs are a vision of that learning carried to adulthood. His fascinatingly realistic creations feature scenes of grassy mushroom covered fields and tiny apartments looking out on equally verdant landscapes. To see one is to truly look into another small world. [Read more...]
Hand-Painted Russian Nesting Dolls- Star Wars Style
If you love collecting Star Wars memorabilia, but are running out of space, then you will love this new collection by Andy Stattmiller. The San Francisco based illustrator/graphic designer has hand-painted these amazing sets of nesting dolls- 8 characters each that fit perfectly inside one another. He has one set for the good guys, and one for the dark side. The largest figures, Chewie and Darth Vader, are 8″ tall and the smallest, R2D2 and Jawa, are just 0.75″ tall. Stattmiller chose to use only characters from Episode IV A New Hope. [Read more...]















