How did artists make this tree levitate?
Artists Daniel Siering and Mario Shu used some great visual trickery to make this tree appear as if it was levitating.
Artists Daniel Siering and Mario Shu used some great visual trickery to make this tree appear as if it was levitating.
A great TV or Film poster should not only look good on your wall, but remind you of just how great a film is. It should capture the feel of the film, and make you want to go back to it time and time again. Ale Giorgini’s alternative TV and film posters do just that. The Italy based artist seems to capture the essence of the Film in just one snapshot, and there’s no mistaking his unique style.
These ghostly dioramas are the work of Italian artist Francesco Romoli. Part of a series called Imaginary Towns, Francesco creates the scenes out of cardboard before photographing them with his Canon 1000D, masterfully utilising lighting and shadow to add incredible depth and feeling. Once photographed the solitary figures are then added in digitally to complete the eery, ghostly scenes. You can find out more about Francesco on his website!
Dutch artist Diet Wiegman has a varied portfolio of work which includes sculpture, painting and photography. But arguably his most creative works are these shadow sculptures most of which actually date back to the 1980s (Wiegman was born in 1944). You can browse more work on his Tumblr or find out more about Diet on Alofoto.
Kacper Kowalski is a photographer and pilot. This is what happens when he combines his two loves…
Vinyl sales are booming, so there’s plenty of wax for Hungarian artist Tamas Kanya to play around with. His recycled artworks are meticulously produced by taking cut-outs of old vinyl records and setting them against a yellow background to create these silhouette effects.
“Newsmaker”, a member of Russian PC modding forum modding.ru, gives us an insight into what really goes on inside your PC. His living-room-inside-a-PC comes complete with miniature chairs, a rug, coffee table, standing lamp and what appears to be a gumball machine…
Michael Johansson’s Tetris-like arrangements caught our eye recently. The Swedish artist packs all manner of objects from keyboards and computers to furniture and cars, into well thought out, colourful installations as evidenced below.