The Monster Engine is a book created by illustrator Dave DeVries who wondered what it would look like if little kids’ drawings were rendered with sophisticated techniques, like coloring, shading and texturing. The conclusion: childrens’ minds are terrifying and this book is totally awesome. More »
It looks like SpongeBob needs a new theme song. More »
Bid now for your chance to purchase evidence that Tony Bennett shouldn’t quit his day job. More »
Ashes to ashes, dust to portraiture? The Czech artist Roman Tyc is making a real name for himself as a pioneer in the genre of cremated-ashes art. Roman uses the leftover bits of ash that would be normally be disposed of by the funeral home to create these huge and haunting portraits. More »
Lady Gaga covers the new issue of the fashion, art and culture magazine Visionaire, as a beautiful inky version of her mermaid alter-ego Yuyi. Shot by Dutch photographers Inez Van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, issue comes in two sizes, and both of them are enormous. More »
Nicki Minaj covers November’s issue of W Magazine, which just so happens to be dedicated to art and fashion. An artist named Francesco Vezzoli decked the pop singer out to look like the women of Renaissance portraits — with a bit of a Minaj-branded twist, of course. More »
A Los Angeles-based street artist named Xvala has been making waves by plastering blow-ups of the leaked Scarlett Johnansson nudes around town. The images, which feature ScarJo along with Xvala’s logo and the words “Fear Google,” are popping up in super public places, and Xvala has been sent a cease and desist from Scarlett’s lawyers. The Huffington Post scored an interview with Xvala. Here’s some of what he had to say: More »
We’re kinda mesmerized by New Math, an art series that creator Craig Damrauer describes as “a quixotic attempt to quantify the world”: Quirky equations for life’s minutiae, ranging from stupid injuries to secrets to ponies. More »
For his Fine Arts project, Swedish aspiring jeweler George Chamoun came up with a pretty great idea: Iconatomy, a collection of collages that match up old film icons like Elizabeth Taylor with current celebrities like Robert Pattinson. More »
Creepy Things That Seem Real But Aren’t is a series that explores modern urban legends, bringing you a new tale each week.
At 24” x 30”, it is a large painting, and a peculiar one. It depicts a boy. The boy stands in front of a window. He is clad in shorts and a blue t-shirt. Beside him is a girl—though she looks more like a doll than a human—who holds an angular object in her hands. The window behind them both reveals that it is nighttime: A crescent moon hangs in a black sky. But it is what is reaching out of the darkness that is truly unsettling. Outside the window, a number of disembodied hands reach towards the window, some rapping on it, some pressing themselves against it, and some merely held up as though seeking recognition. The boy, however, does not see the hands. He faces the viewer head-on.
The painting is called “THE HANDS RESIST HIM.” More »
Is there a name for the condition of being aroused by knitware? Purlophilia? Then the art project Lana Sutra appears to be catering to purlophiliacs. Curated by Cuban artist Erik Ravelo, the sensual sweater exhibition opened in three European Benneton stores earlier this week. More »
Photographer Autumn de Wilde dressed Miranda July all up in Rodarte and snapped some photos for Tar Magazine. The resulting images, which have been manipulated and written on, are clever, thoughtful and pretty all at once. Also: absurdly cool, but given the artists involved, that should go without saying. More »
Regular old taxidermy is unsettling enough. It’s taking a dead thing and stuffing it so it looks like an alive thing — and that’s weird to me. Which means that artist Andrew Lancaster‘s taxidermy hybrids — which mix and match pieces from different animals — are more than I can handle. More »
The answer to the question asked in our headline is, of course, plastic straw art, although this photo could just as easily show some kind of anemone situation. Artist Annie Boyden Varno makes these swizzle straw creations as a commentary on the toxic results of man’s interference in nature. More »
What kind of a Camp Week would we be running over here if we didn’t put up some kind of tribute to John Waters? The Baltimore filmmaker is often imitated and alluded to, and here are some drawings done in his honor. Pink flamingos for everyone! More »
Sounds like someone was mad he wasn’t invited. More »
Talking Heads founder David Byrne is perpetually up to something cool. If he’s not singing backing vocals on Arcade Fire records or writing his New York Times column about cycling (seriously), he’s creating wry and topical art. His latest offering is this series of fake iPhone apps which will be seen in a group show called “Social Media” alongside works by artists including Miranda July and Christopher Baker.
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Remember that horrifying statue of a naked Britney Spears giving birth? Well, artist Daniel Edwards is back with a bronze sculpture of a naked Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez, united as one being of Pure Love. Or something. More »