(Source: jaymug, via loveyourchaos)
Beth Cavener Stichter (featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 16) caught our attention with her raw sculptural style. The artist forms animals by hollowing out blocks of clay, giving her subjects a raw, unrefined appearance as if they sprang from the material itself. In her latest body of work for her second solo show at Claire Oliver Gallery, “Come Undone,” Cavener Stichter refined her aesthetic, creating animal sculptures that are more stylized with deep grooves and glazed with different shades of gray — a departure from her minimally embellished work from the past. Take a look at a few images from “Come Undone,” which opens September 13 at Claire Oliver in New York City.
(via loveyourchaos)
See anything familiar around the streets of Brooklyn recently? You might stumble upon (or seek out!) this awesome handpainted Copper wallscape—created by the street art collective The Collabros.
Shout out to Ashley Keene.
This is how I’ve felt the last few weeks
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For some, It’s Mt. Everest
Help build more handicap facilities.Advertising School: School of Visual Arts, USA
Creative Director:Frank Anselmo
Art Director: Jeseok Yi
Copywriter: Jeseok Yi
Released: February 2007
(via karenhurley)
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Italian artist Alberto Seveso took high-speed photos of inks mixing underwater to create the above image. The story appears on Design Milk, a site new to me but full of luscious design in all categories.