Architectural Drawing by Minty Sainsbury

Having a 2-years experience in architectural studies I can't pass by the portfolio of a talented pencil artist Minty Sainsbury (Instagram). Her latest series of "Seen Through Masterpieces" makes us think of how far did the urban development ruin the historical city sightseens wherever it is in London or Saint-Petersburg.

minty-sainsbury1

minty-sainsbury2

minty-sainsbury3

minty-sainsbury4

minty-sainsbury5

minty-sainsbury6

minty-sainsbury7

minty-sainsbury8

minty-sainsbury9

Art of Jeremy Miranda

"Jeremy Miranda’s work is calming, like the divergent directions of both halves of an overclocked brain spontaneously aligning, spectrum of possibility crystallizing poignantly, the chaos of the wider world and the general entropy of everyday life suddenly glowing, comforting, an austere blanket, warm."

via

jeremy-miranda6

jeremy-miranda

jeremy-miranda1

jeremy-miranda2

jeremy-miranda3

jeremy-miranda4

jeremy-miranda5

Art of Marco Battaglini

Marco Battaglini pastiches together bits of Renaissance art with graffiti and other elements of modern pop — not unlike the divine versus the vulgar — in his digital paintings. By mashing together opposing visual traditions, the Italian artist (living in Costa Rica) challenges the viewer to contemplate a variety of topics: cultural democratization, the evolution of knowledge and information, and what he calls our 'patchwork culture.'

via

marco-battaglini16

marco-battaglini1

marco-battaglini2

marco-battaglini3

marco-battaglini4

marco-battaglini5

marco-battaglini6

marco-battaglini7

marco-battaglini8

marco-battaglini9

marco-battaglini10

marco-battaglini11

marco-battaglini12

marco-battaglini13

marco-battaglini14

marco-battaglini15

Macro art by Rómulo Celdrán

Artist Rómulo Celdrán turns everyday objects into oversized sculptures for his series 'Macro'. That is not a new concept in terms of postmodernism sculpture but he does it with a great passion to details and as he said "I believe there is something magic in the world of scales. There is a kind of emotional memory that invites us to feel the relationship with the Macro objects as if it were a game"

via

romuloceldran_art-08

romulo-celdran

romulocerdrano_art

romuloceldran_art-01

romuloceldran_art-01i

romuloceldran_art-02

romuloceldran_art-03

romuloceldran_art-06

romuloceldran_art-05

romuloceldran_art-07

romuloceldran_art-04

Fluid Pigments by Thomas Robson

Thomas Robson’s series, Fluid Pigments, adds a touch of contemporary flair to very classic figures. The juxtaposition of elements, especially classics alongside modern, normally have a high impact as people get caught off-guard by ideas and concepts yet unknown to them. His work directly addresses ideas of appropriation, inspiration, and originality, as well as reflecting our current media saturated culture.

thomas-robson-paintings-0

thomas-robson-paintings-1

thomas-robson-paintings-2

thomas-robson-paintings-3

thomas-robson-paintings-5

thomas-robson-paintings-6

thomas-robson-paintings-9

thomas-robson-paintings-11

Mark Tansey

"Mark Tansey (Artsy) created collages serve as studies for large, monochromatic oil paintings of figures and landscapes, whose precise photographic quality is achieved by applying gesso and then washing, brushing, and scraping paint into it. He uses ultramarine blue, a color that combines the depth and complexities of black with the lightness and transparency of blue, and which imparts the historicizing feel of blueprint." via

Mark-Tansey-9

Mark-Tansey-10

Mark-Tansey-2

Mark-Tansey-3

Mark-Tansey-4

Thibault Delhom

"Thibault Delhom (Behance, Instagram) finds interesting ways to infuse his portraits with a creative edge, whether it’s by digitally adding lines and graphics or by using surreal props like an anatomically correct hand. The colour scheme is made up of predominately darker tonalities and he achieves a high level of contrast which is great to see. High quality stuff indeed." via

thibault-delhom-11

thibault-delhom-06

thibault-delhom

thibault-delhom-03

thibault-delhom-02

thibault-delhom-10

thibault-delhom-05

Ball Pool and the Beach at National Museum of Washington

"Brooklyn-based experimental studio Snarkitecture is bringing the ocean indoors, transforming water and waves into nearly one million recyclable translucent plastic balls. Covering 10,000 square feet of the National Building Museum in Washington D.C., the interactive installation titled “The BEACH” will include white beach chairs and umbrellas to simulate seaside vibes, while maintaining the monochrome feel that Snarkitecture has become known for." writes Colossal. You might remember one London studio did it first but in a smaller room.

All included images are by Noah Kalina

snarkitecture-beach7

snarkitecture-beach8

snarkitecture

snarkitecture-beach1

snarkitecture-beach2

snarkitecture-beach3

snarkitecture-beach4

snarkitecture-beach5

snarkitecture-beach6

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K155wl-F1Aw

Daniel Arsham art

"New York based artist Daniel Arsham (Instagram) straddles the line between art, architecture and performance. Architecture is a prevalent subject throughout his work; environments with eroded walls and stairs going nowhere, landscapes where nature overrides structures, and a general sense of playfulness within existing architecture. Arsham makes architecture do things it is not supposed to do, mining everyday experience for opportunities to confuse and confound our expectations of space and form. Simple yet paradoxical gestures dominate his sculptural work: a façade that appears to billow in the wind, a figure wrapped up in the surface of a wall, a contemporary object cast in volcanic ash as if it was found on some future archeological site." Read more on his website

daniel-arsham13

daniel-arsham

daniel-arsham1

daniel-arsham2

daniel-arsham3

daniel-arsham4

daniel-arsham5

daniel-arsham6

daniel-arsham7

daniel-arsham8

daniel-arsham9

daniel-arsham10

daniel-arsham11

daniel-arsham12

Empty Public Spaces by Candida Höfer

Candida Höfer is a photographer known for her large-format images of architectural interiors. For several decades Candida Höfer made architectural “portraits” of numerous treasure-houses across the world: the Louvre, Uffizi Gallery, the Royal Portuguese Library in Rio de Janeiro, La Scala opera-house in Milan, and many others. via

Her works are exhibiting at Hermitage in Saint-Petersburg now

candida-hofer1

candida-hofer2

candida-hofer3

candida-hofer4

candida-hofer5

candida-hofer6

candida-hofer7

candida-hofer8

candida-hofer9

Watch Classical Sculptures Spring To Life Through The Magic Of Projection Mapping

Walk through any good art classical museum, and the statues can seem so real, it's almost as if they'll come to life if turn your back on them. At France's Lyon Museum of Fine Arts, for at least one night, that's exactly what happened.

golem-mba-lyon1

The museum asked artist Arnaud Pottier to bring sculptures, including Laurent Honore Marqueste's Perseus Slaying Medusa, James Pradier's Odalisque, and Barrias' Les Premières Funérailles, to life. His method was pretty simple: He used projection mapping, which can turn anything—including statues—into a display.

Text via FastCo

Preview the "Golem x MBA" project on Behance

golem-mba-lyon2

golem-mba-lyon3

http://vimeo.com/131201461

Watch Classical Sculptures Spring To Life Through The Magic Of Projection Mapping

Walk through any good art classical museum, and the statues can seem so real, it's almost as if they'll come to life if turn your back on them. At France's Lyon Museum of Fine Arts, for at least one night, that's exactly what happened.

golem-mba-lyon1

The museum asked artist Arnaud Pottier to bring sculptures, including Laurent Honore Marqueste's Perseus Slaying Medusa, James Pradier's Odalisque, and Barrias' Les Premières Funérailles, to life. His method was pretty simple: He used projection mapping, which can turn anything—including statues—into a display.

Text via FastCo

Preview the "Golem x MBA" project on Behance

golem-mba-lyon2

golem-mba-lyon3

http://vimeo.com/131201461