Weightlessness in Nature by Cornelia Konrads
Cornelia’s outdoor installations seem to give Mother Nature the finger with their brazen defiance of gravity. Suspended in time, her works often seem to be in caught in the middle of construction themselves, an act we were never supposed to witness.
Pantone Album Covers by David Marsh
David Marsh reproduces classic album covers in a Pantone-pixel display that breaks the instantly recognizable images into as little detail as possible. Contact David for prints at his website: davidmarsh.sketch360
(via: designboom)
Metal Insect Sculptures by Elizabeth Goluch
Elizabeth’s lifelike insect and spider sculptures incorporate metal, gold, silver, enamel, and a little slice of steampunk. You are highly advised to check out her website to see all the amazing details I couldnt post here, as most of her clockwork bugs have movable parts and secret compartments that reveal hidden flourishes (the Dragonfly, for instance, hides a dragon beneath its wings while the ladybug houses a tiny house inside of it. SO GO LOOKS).
(via: lostateminor)
Bionic Concepts by John Paul Rishea
Prepare for the future the sexy way with Rishea’s cyborg chic designs, available for purchase at his etsy. Santa may not bring you Hydraulic Armor Boots for Christmas, but Mosh and some of her sultry fembot friends have returned from the future to get you retrofitted.
Artist: website (via: fashionablygeek)
Beer Can Butterflies by Paul Villinski
At first glance this is just a gorgeous sculpture of a guitar slowly deteriorating into butterflies, until you check out Paul’s website to find out that the butterflies are all made of empty beer cans he finds in the streets of New York: “every one of them once raised to someone’s lips. My process of ‘recycling’ them into images of butterflies is a quiet physical meditation, a yoga of tin snips and files and fingers”.
(via: farewell-kingdom)