Immensely Exaggerated Features Sculptures by Gerardo Feldstein


These wacky human figures with disproportionately large hands or feet sculptures are created Artist Gerardo Feldstein. Feldstein uses wire and wood to to portray some perspectives when it’s distorted. As he says, “I see the sculpture as an extension of myself, my characters do, dramatize things I want and I can do.

( via My Monden Met )

Enormous Wood Sculptures by Jaehyo Lee


These enormous wood sculptures are created by Korean artist Jaehyo Lee.

( Via Cosas Cool & JANNIE JANNIE )

100 Years Later

Maico Akiba, an illustrator, sculptor and frequent collaborator with Yusuke Kagari. This is her an ongoing project called 100 Years Later.

Spoon & Tamago )
( all images courtesy maico akiba )

Colorful Macro Sculpture by Takahiro Iwasaki


These colorful macro sculptures are frome Japanese artist Takahiro Iwasaki who currently has a new collection at the 7th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art at GOMA in Queensland.

(via colossal)

Fantastic Anamorphic Sculptures and Engineered Illusions by Jonty Hurwitz


Artist Jonty Hurwitz born in Johannesburg in 1969, now lives and works in London. He recently use over a billion computer calculations considering how to materialize his warped ideas. Hurwitz is a somewhat of renaissance man, he founed Wonga that is a micro-loan website in 2007. Now, his artwork will display at the Kinetica art show in London in February. You also can see more his artwork on his websiteFacebookSaatchi profile, and Youtube.

(via Colossal)

Macro Photography of Snowflakes


Russian photographer Andrew Osokin captured these snowflakes formations, if you like his artworks, see more in his LensArt profile.

(via the curious brain)

Complex Patterns of Stones by Computer Algorithms


Italian artist Giuseppe Randazzo Uses computer algorithms created these nice and complex 3D patterns of stone. The process’s code is a C++ console application that outputs an obj 3D image. Awesome!

Giuseppe Randazzo’s website
( via Arpeggia )

Flower Sculptures Parade in Zundert, Netherlands

( via Bloemencorso  & Colossal image via Bloemencorso Zundert )

Amazing City Scenes Made from Cardboard

Artist Andy Rudak recently show a personal project that is a extraordinarily realistic city scenes completely out of cardboard and other fabricated materials.
Set-builder Luke Aan de Wiel, he produced a full series of cardboard city creations, each city is about 4-5 feet high and almost realistic details.

See more details in Andy Rudak’s website.

via (Junk-Culture)