the anonymous artistic group has suspended 2,500 illuminated condoms from a structural grid, forming large, luminous 'droplets' that surround visitors.
The post luzinterruptus forms interactive rain canopy in taiwan with 2,500 illuminated condoms appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
a narrow vertical opening breaks beyond the violent exterior, allowing entrance into the womb-like interior, a place of comfort, tranquility, and peace.
The post peace negates violence in inflatable sculpture by slow studio appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
various ingredients from cucumbers to corn comprise colorful displays of carefully-cut pieces, forming an entirely edible artwork.
The post mosaic sushi culinary craze turns japanese meals into artistic arrangements appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
A submerged statue of the Hindu Lord Shiva stands amid the flooded waters of river Ganges at Rishikesh in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand, India, June 17, 2013.
Photo: Reuters
I remember being in Uttarakhand when this happened… Absolutely terrifying.
khalili engineers' proposal for the 2016 land art generator initiative could generate billions of liters of drinking water for santa monica.
The post solar-powered ‘pipe' sculpture generates 4.5 billion liters of drinkable water from the ocean appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
the vibrant and dynamic graphic spans the sports area with an op-art-themed print that blends patterns and illustration.
The post zuk club paints skatepark in moscow with giant op-art graphic appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
Writer-illustrator Shaun Tan turned sculptor for his new book, The Singing Bones, which collects images of the 75 miniature tableaux he made of the Brothers Grimm's immortal collection of dark, disturbing fairytales
Continue reading...The writer-illustrator made his name with dark, unsettling picture books such as The Rabbits. Now he's swapped his pencil for clay to make miniature nightmares based on the stories of the Brothers Grimm
Two centuries and a world apart, the Brothers Grimm and Shaun Tan share an ability to confound those who attempt to categorise them. When the German Grimm siblings released the first edition of their tales in 1812, it was under the name Kinder-und Hausmärchen, or Children's and Household Tales, a title that belied the incest, infanticide and cannibalism found within. It didn't sell. Even after they spent 45 years making increasingly child-friendly revisions over seven editions, their tales of princesses and princes, step-mothers and witches remained controversial; after the second world war, allied forces briefly banned the publication of the Grimm tales in Germany, believing that their violence and nationalism had fuelled Nazi savagery, while around the same time, Disney was hijacking them for saccharine retellings of Cinderella (featuring less eye-plucking) and Snow White (less death by dancing).
Tan also ostensibly writes books for children, but has a history of confusing adults with his surreal, often political picture books. The Australian artist quickly became famous for his intricately illustrated and laconic stories. He picked at the scabs of Australian history in books including The Rabbits (1998), a surreal allegory about colonisation, and The Arrival (2006), an entirely wordless graphic novel about refugees, and he pulled apart mental illness and depression in picture book The Red Tree (2001). Tan was dismissed by some on Australia's right for producing “politically correct propaganda”; for those who loved him, the greatest criticism could be that his books “would almost rather be looked at than read”, as the New York Times once wrote.
Continue reading...