1. photojojo:

Don’t worry, we were drooling when we first saw it too. It’s a new print from Pop Chart Lab titled “A Visual Compendium of Cameras,” and it features 100 of the most important cameras in history.
This May Be The Coolest Camera Print There Is 
via Superbunneh

    photojojo:

    Don’t worry, we were drooling when we first saw it too. It’s a new print from Pop Chart Lab titled “A Visual Compendium of Cameras,” and it features 100 of the most important cameras in history.

    This May Be The Coolest Camera Print There Is

    via Superbunneh

  2. photojojo:

    Alison Anselot shot a series of photos matching delicious looking food with its corresponding Pantone color. 

    Photos Creatively Match Food With Corresponding Pantone Color

    via 123 Inspiration

  3. free-parking:

    Francis Alÿs, Nightwatch, 2004.  

    Surveillance cameras observe a fox exploring the Tudor and Georgian rooms of the National Portrait Gallery at night.

  4. Gangnam for Freedom - Anish Kapoor and Friends (Official Video) (by GangnamForFreedom)

  5. montereybayaquarium:

    Have you had a chance to stroll through our new plastics gallery in the Open Sea wing? It includes spectacular art installations and photo collages from artists all over the world, created from everyday plastic.

    Enjoy the art—and learn what you can do to reduce plastic use

  6. unconsumption:

Spotted here (shared from original post that didn’t link to a source).
Took a minute to search online for a source, and I found one here, which, um, sells “all you need is less” prints.
{Sigh.} 

    unconsumption:

    Spotted here (shared from original post that didn’t link to a source).

    Took a minute to search online for a source, and I found one here, which, um, sells “all you need is less” prints.

    {Sigh.} 

  7. unconsumption:

London-based artist duo Tim Noble and Sue Webster, whose work we first covered on Unconsumption in April 2009 (here), have opened their first solo exhibition in London since 2006.  

Tim Noble and Sue Webster take ordinary things including rubbish, to make assemblages and then point light to create projected shadows which show a great likeness to something identifiable including self-portraits. The art of projection is emblematic of transformative art. The process of transformation, from discarded waste, scrap metal or even taxidermy creatures to a recognizable image, echoes the idea of ‘perceptual psychology’ a form of evaluation used for psychological patients. Noble and Webster are familiar with this process and how people evaluate abstract forms. Throughout their careers they have played with the idea of how humans perceive abstract images and define them with meaning. The result is surprising and powerful as it redefines how abstract forms can transform into figurative ones.

The show, which features six large-scale sculptures, runs through November 24, 2012, at Blain|Southern. 
(via Nihilistic Optimistic: New Shadow Sculptures Built from Discarded Wood from Tim Noble and Sue Webster | Colossal)

    unconsumption:

    London-based artist duo Tim Noble and Sue Webster, whose work we first covered on Unconsumption in April 2009 (here), have opened their first solo exhibition in London since 2006.  

    Tim Noble and Sue Webster take ordinary things including rubbish, to make assemblages and then point light to create projected shadows which show a great likeness to something identifiable including self-portraits. The art of projection is emblematic of transformative art. The process of transformation, from discarded waste, scrap metal or even taxidermy creatures to a recognizable image, echoes the idea of ‘perceptual psychology’ a form of evaluation used for psychological patients. Noble and Webster are familiar with this process and how people evaluate abstract forms. Throughout their careers they have played with the idea of how humans perceive abstract images and define them with meaning. The result is surprising and powerful as it redefines how abstract forms can transform into figurative ones.

    The show, which features six large-scale sculptures, runs through November 24, 2012, at Blain|Southern

    (via Nihilistic Optimistic: New Shadow Sculptures Built from Discarded Wood from Tim Noble and Sue Webster | Colossal)

  8. gaksdesigns:

    Thread installation work of Gabriel Dawe

About me

Name: Kat
Occupation: Student, photographer, intern
Appreciates:
Environmentalism
Photography
Conservation
Sustainability
Renewable Energy
Dance
Democracy
Bats
Madison, WI
Environmental Art
Red Pandas
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Wisconsin Badger Football
Local Indie Bookstores
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Broccoli
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I Blog: Anything from the list above, but mainly a smattering of cute animals, environmental stuff, politics, photography, weddings, interior design, cupcakes, books, and whatever else I feel like depending on current events and the availability of new red panda photos.

Enjoy.

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