mickey and woody
Not sure who actually made the work. If you know let us know. We found it here
Not sure who actually made the work. If you know let us know. We found it here
I love these dolls Very “City of Lost Children”. Brooklyn Designer Kristen Victoria Barron‘s Porcelain faced marionettes. Available at Future Perfect.
This is a dub rendition of the copyrighted image of the Bronze Kaws figurehead, the piece that separates the real, devoted Kaws collector from that of one who just liked the toy sculptures.
KAWS
Untitled (Self Portrait), 2008
bronze (painted)
11 x 6 1/4 x 9 1/2 inches
Series of 33 unique colors
$25,000
via, TAC
Check out Jud Tuner‘s Bio Cycle.
Check out New York Artist CAL LANE‘s engraved oil barrels. The work is amazing, detailed, and delicately intricate.
First of all. BIG UPS TO MY FRIEND JOSEPH AND HIS BIZ PARTNER ELURA for getting Anonymous Gallery off of the ground and into our lives!
Now, to the good stuff.
Eltono and MOMO are installing kinetic sculpture in New York waterways. Maps are provided at the gallery and the public is encouraged to discover all of the new work.
Throughout the month of September, Eltono and MOMO will also be constructing an indoor exhibition that reflects the work and progress outdoors. While their project is primarily ephemeral, the indoor exhibition will serve to document and preserve their research, ideas, model making and related art. Every three to five days Eltono and MOMO will install new work that includes silkscreen prints, video, collage, painting, and sculpture. The on-going exhibition, along with the map and information will be available to the public from September 1st until October 10th and will be celebrated with a public exhibition opening on September 25th from 6-9pm.
Check out Italian Artist Esther Stocker’s ‘Geometrifying’ installations with patterns in reduced black and white.
[via:everyone forever]
Just in case you missed this on Wooster Collective, check out this sculpture of a white bear by Joshua Allen Harris. His work captures lost energy from a New York subway grate, alternating between roadkill and resurrection. It proves simple ideas can have a huge impact.
[via:artthreat.net]