We love these abstracted stone sculptures by design group NastPlas, which are entirely digital renders. The level of detail and texture and color is really beautiful, achieving a realistic stone look and feel.
Chris Labrooy has a way with transforming cars, digitally, to become acrobatic stars you’ve never seen before. We’re impressed by his imagination, taking well known classic sports cars, and tweaking them in ways we’d never have imagined ourselves.
This beautiful ‘treehouse’ is more a modern cabin, built vertically, and suspended into the Mexican treetops.
Really unique and impressive pottery by Martha Pachón Rodríguez, who brings sharp, ‘teeth’ to the edges of her ceramics. The multi-colored, intricate points add fascinating contrast to the vessels, which feel very organic and alive.
We’ve seen a lot of beautiful examples of paper quilling recently, and this is no exception. These extravagant, colorful flowers radiate life, even though they’re simply made from paper.
3D illustrator Aarón Martínez has a knack for the everyday, rendering ordinary scenes into playful and adorable vignettes. We love the absurdity and plasticky plumpness of his characters, and the humorous setups they’re in.
Part of an initiative for the Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Knowledge Foundation, these fantastical paper creations by Zim and Zou pays homage to the winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature.
With the dramatic fire that Paris’ famed Notre Dame Cathedral sustained recently, people have wondered what the rebuilding effort will look like. Here are some interesting concepts.
The Hollywood Dream Machines exhibit in Los Angeles will feature some of the most iconic movie cars ever.
In a series that features rare and endangered butterfly species, glass artist Laura Hart creates stunning facsimiles that bring a whole new meaning to ‘fragile species’.
Dichroic glass is special because it displays two different colors, depending on how the light hits it. Artist and sculptor Chris Woods takes advantage of this property, with some beautiful geometric sculptures made up of glass squares.
This Massachusetts university has an impressive new business school building, with a facade that resembles falling dominoes.
We’re shocked by the massive fire engulfing the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris. Here is an examination of the iconic landmark.
Celebrating the female form, Paris-based photographer Dani Olivier dresses nude models in nothing but geometric light projections, creating fascinating and beautiful forms.
Japanese sculptor and ceramicist Jun Kaneko resides in Omaha, Nebraska, and makes large-scale, expressive ceramic sculptures. His well known ‘Dango’ form (dumpling or closed form in English) reach over six feet in height, with colorful and expressive glazing, including dots, stripes, and drip techniques.
We are always impressed by new and innovative ways that people use existing materials. So we found this cafe in Mumbai especially interesting and bold, using corrugated cardboard to make the majority of the cafe’s interior.
Using fiberglass and resin, Mueck created 100 enormous human skulls, and piled them into one of the classic painting rooms at the National Gallery of Victoria, in Melbourne.
Sculptor John Morris is an expert at seeing a material, and understanding its potential as a sculptural element. Utilizing wood, metal, but also found objects like billiard balls, he has a collection of beautifully elegant pieces that have depth and personality.
We’re blown away by the scope, scale, and final effect of this art installation by Rone, built in the abandoned Burnham Beeches mansion in Melbourne.
Using very thing ceramics and a dramatic inverted drip look, sculptor Bian Xiaodong has created a series of bowls that resemble the spiny mouth of a Venus Fly Trap.
An exceptionally sleek and modern home in Spain makes us wonder, what is too minimal? We explore the Hofmann House.
8-bit graphics may be a thing of the past, but their low-def aesthetic remains alive in the art world, with low-poly design and artwork from people like Felipe Pantone. His latest series of ‘sculptures’ are mostly 2D in nature, but have the same simplistic forms and shapes as the earliest computer graphics.
Paper art comes in all forms and styles, as flexible as your imagination is. Estonian artist Eiko Ojala helps to push the medium further, thanks to his dynamic, intricate, and impactful cut paper artwork.