1. (Source: antronaut, via antronaut)

     

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  3. Installation by artist Mark Dion at the Explorers Club

     

  4. msampsoncontemporary:

    SCIENTIFIC APPROACH

    I have always been interested in order.  To say that things must be put in a specific place would be over exaggerating, but I do find pleasure in an almost OCD neatness.  So when I see artists incorporating a scientific approach into their works I am immediately fascinated with the process and scale of the work.The works of Alberto Baraya, Liu Chuang, Mark Dion, Song Dong and Andreas Gursky often come to mind when I think about artists, whose practice incorporates a systematized and archaeological process. 

     

  5. A “zero yen house” designed by the Japanese artist and architect Kyohei Sakaguchi to be constructed with little or no money.

    Image credit: Kyohei Sakaguchi & Noriko Hayashi for The New York Times

    (Source: The New York Times)

     


  6. Cragg, Tony

    The plastic objects which make up ‘New Stones, Newton’s Tones’ were collected by Tony Cragg in a few hours in May 1978 in the area where the artist lives in Wuppertal, Germany. 'I didn’t sort or select the materials I collected until later when black, white, silver, printed and multi-duplicating objects (like ice-cream spoons) were set aside. All remaining objects were laid out, more or less evenly distributed in a rectangular format 9’ x 12’, in an approximate sequence of Newton’s spectrum: dark red, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, dark blue, violet.’ From a distance it seems to shimmer and dematerialise like a rainbow. Spread out as it is on the floor, consisting of so many individual items, it is not a self-contained sculptural object. Its form invites comparison with floor pieces by Richard Long which are made of stones collected on walks. Cragg’s materials, however, are the product of modern technology. Their very choice, transferred and arranged for a gallery context, does more perhaps than show that discarded objects have beauty, but rather suggests that industry’s production of endless copies is not unlike nature’s manner of reproduction. Isobel Johnstone

    ARTWORK DETAILS: 366 x 244cm

    EDITION:

    MATERIAL DESCRIPTION: plastic

    CREDIT LINE: © the artist

    THEME: Abstract

    MEDIUM: Sculpture

    image
     

  7. Oh Africa - Broken clay pipe bowls  Kevin Dodwell

     


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    Blue things from museum collection

    By Jess Bock (@thebockster)

     

  9. Volkswagen Golf, Deconstructed

     

  10. Taxis in San Francisco by Joey Tranchina

     

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  13. Mid-Century Modern Phone Booth design at Los Angeles International Airport, by Paul R. Williams.

    (Source: ebay.com)

     

  14. Toshiba Advertisement by BBDO, 2012. 

    Wish they would have called me!

    (Source: adsoftheworld.com)

     

  15. Bryan Gardner for Martha Stewart