Olafur Eliasson, a Berlin based artist, literally brings the outdoors inside by filling the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark with soil and stones to resemble a riverbed, hence the name of the exhibition. Eliasson wants the visitor to
British artist Nick Gentry uses found objects and contributed artefacts to make mixed media collages. This series uses the now obsolete floppy disk to make paintings, resulting in an archaeological display of digital history to pay homage to the roles
Tennessee-based trained illustrator Jessica Wohl works in the areas of painting, drawing, installation, collage and performance. She focuses on the concept of home and its residents, aiming to prove that not everything is what it seems by drawing and sewing
Meet Marina Abramopug, the pug version of Marina Abramovic we never thought we needed. Recreating ‘The Artist Is Present’ from Abramovic’s piece at the 2012 MoMA retrospective, this pug first appeared at the Serpentine Gallery in London (or rather in
Dutch photographer Rene Mesman creates images borrowing the style of still life paintings: a pineapple fish, a peach-nut, a long-haired owl, and a pink artichoke. More wacky associations after the break.
Vancouver-based artist Ed Spence takes photos of crumpled pieces of reflective paper, he then prints the image and cuts out a section using a blade. Subsequently he cuts up the section into small pixels, re-arranging them by colour. These works
French animator Mattis Dovier, whose fantastic GIFs were featured here earlier, has also directed a pixelated, 8-bit music video for Plurabelle’s ‘Our Fires’. Inspired by old video games, the music video is a thrilling, erotic trip into creepy suburbia, where
‘Transcendence’ is a realtime audiovisual performance by duo ITSU & MISAK, originating from Moscow, Russia.
Publishing company Black Balloon sent ‘And Every Day Was Overcast’ (read our review here) author-photographer Paul Kwiatkowski to Mount Shasta, CA to investigate the volcano that some claim to be the site of Telos, a hidden city inhabited by advanced
Artist Christopher Schulz decided to combine two lethal objects in one: firearms and sharks, one of the largest predators. His chrome sculptures are equally impressive as surrealist and go by the name of (what else?) Shark Guns.