24 Hours In Photos

“This installation by Erik Kessels is on show as part of an exhibition at Foam in Amsterdam that looks at the future of photography. It features print-outs of all the images uploaded to Flickr in a 24-hour period… As you might imagine, this results in a lot of images, that fill the gallery space in an avalanche of photos.” w/ photos

Keep Drawing!

“The most beautiful and inspiring video I’ve witnessed in a long time. Effective.” — Liu

Mind-Blowing Doodle Portraits

American artist Jason Sho Green has taken the pastime to a whole new level with his amazing doodle portraits that look like modern-day mosaics. Seen from a distance, his works looked like detailed recreations of his subjects, for which he uses shadows to outline the fine characteristics of the face, but as you approach them you realize there’s a lot more to them. Jason actually uses a ball-point pen to ‘assemble’ his portraits from various doodles, including images of people, animals and fantastic creatures.” w/ photos

Artistic Otter Likes To Paint

“Meet the otter who likes to paint. Apparently he prefers watercolors… part of the new wave of avant-garde aquatic mammals.”

Naked Underwater Mosaic

Some people might say that humans beings are herd animals. But these stunning images appear to prove the adage beyond any doubt. These surreal mosaics, made from thousands of swarming human bodies, were the talk of this year’s Pulse LA art fair. The awe-inspiring pieces, created by New York based-photographic artist Angelo Musco, are, literally, making waves in the photographic world. Musco’s images mimic the complex structures of the natural world from an ant colony and beehive to a school of fish. His work attempts to touch on grand themes such as birth, procreation and gestation. ‘A swarm of fish captures a profusion of life, the safety of a symbolic nest, and a connection of one being to another.” w/ photos

Tiger Rug Made From 500k Cigarettes

A real tiger rug is a rare thing to have, but rarer still is one made from hundreds of thousands of tobacco cigarettes. Weighing an impressive 440 pounds, this cigarette rug has to be one of the largest tobacco-inspired art installations in history. It was created by a group of artists by stacking hundreds of thousands of cigarettes on their ends, in the shape of a tiger pattern rug.” w/ photos

I Dream Of 4,242 Rubik’s Cubes!

“Designer Pete Fecteau spent much of 2010 creating this amazing Rubik’s Cube mosaic of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., comprised of 4,242 individual Rubik’s Cubes. The mosaic measures 18’6″ by 9’8″ and weighs about 1,000 pounds. The concept of using Rubik’s Cubes this way came to Fecteau in a dream.” w/ photos + video

The Underwater Painter!

It is usually a hobby which takes patience, care, and for the artist to be at their most comfortable so they can create true masterpieces. But while most painters insist that ‘you can’t rush art’, time is of the essence for these unusual artists, who paint unique pieces as underwater divers 64ft beneath the surface. The group of underwater divers from the Ukraine complete their series of drawings after plunging to the depths of the Black Sea. Although some watercolours take hours to finish, the scuba-trained artists are painting against the clock, as their diving equipment only allows them to draw for 40 minutes at a time. And time is not the only issue the artists have to deal with, as their watery surroundings change the color of their paints mid-piece.” w/ photos + video

Sweet Display Of Fruit Patterns

“It’s strange how traditions start. In the late 1960s Ralph Upton, a farmer from the small, picturesque English village of Slindon in the county of West Sussex place his yearly crop of pumpkins, squashes and gourds on his shed to ripen. The colors and shapes of his harvest soon attracted visitors – and things have never been quite the same in Slindon since.” w/ photos

Human Hair Embroidery

Bogota-based Zaira Pulido has been asking every one of her friends and people she’s into for strands of their hair to use in a series of embroidered artworks. She uses the human hair instead of the usual thread and creates various works, like embroidered portraits of her friends (each made with their own hair), an embroidered comb or a replica of her bra. I noticed some people find working with human hair disgusting, but personally I like seeing hair used as an art medium, and Zaira Pulido’s work is right up my alley.” w/ photos