Artist Terry Cook puts a very impressive spin on the party balloon animals that you remember from your childhood. Mimicking real bird species and placed in their natural habitat, he blends lines between comical and accurate.
Simon Brown takes old, falling-apart brushes, and turns them into delightful nature scenes, using the bristles as stand-in for grass.
This inspiring project aims to take famous paintings of the world, turn them into 3d sculptures, and allow the visually impaired to ‘see’ them using tactile touch.
Photographer Winnie Au has flipped the concept of the ‘cone of shame’, with versions that are glammed out, made from all manner of unique and fancy materials.
The iconic VW Microbus has been recreated faithfully and lovingly using over 400,000 Lego bricks, for a travel convention in Munich, Germany.
An ambitious and fascinating project by Refik Anadol is meant to visualize the way brain activity looks. Utilizing sculpture, projections and augmented reality, Anadol is able to create a fascinating visualization of how our brains actually capture and store memories.
An adorable series by San Francisco photographer Melissa Kaseman that shows her preschooler’s pocket contents that he brings home everyday.
We’re quite sure you’ve never seen a classic, 1972 Lamborghini Miura SV like this before. Artist Fabian Oefner is known for his series called Disintegrating, which dramatically shatters cars into thousands of pieces.
Creating birds, cats, owls, and deer out of nothing more than spoons and forks, Matt Wilson has a fun body of work that shows just how expressive that soup spoon can be.
Renowned sculptor Jaume Plensa’s “Talking Continents” is making its way to the Telfair Museums in Savannah Georgia, sure to make a visual impact.
Digital artist Chris Lebrooy collaborated with Nike to create a series of fictional flying machines to represent the speed and power of their Pegasus running line.
Studio Drift is known for big and dramatic lighting installations, ones that fill major civic spaces and fancy hotel lobbies. This particular stunner is called In 20 Steps, and is designed as a tribute to human’s desire to be able to fly.
The world’s biggest moose sculpture was recently unveiled in Norway, much to the chagrin of Canada, which previously held the record.
Alexander Unger’s latest project, Distortion, is made up of intricate movements and more than 2500 frames, and explores shapes, toothy faces, and springy gravity, all with delightful quirkiness throughout.
Montreal-based artist Raku Inoue’s animal sculptures are part of a series he calls “Safari Triforce”, made up of a solemn gorilla, a peaceful musk ox, and a fierce tiger.
This remarkable series by fashion photographer Rob Woodcox turns human bodies into architectural works of art.
Artist and photographer Pol Kurucz has a beautifully colorful and hilarious series called Hair Stories that showcases some truly world-class hair design photographed in clean, minimal backdrops.
A dramatic installation called Strawpocalypse is made from over 168,000 plastic straws, to draw attention to plastic waste.
It’s amazing what fluorescent cord can do when it’s transformed into a volume, like this installation in Washington, D.C.
Made from bits of fuzz, sticks, and utterly simplistic shapes, these minimalist creatures by Stephanie Dewhirst make us chuckle.
The Estonian forests near Tallinn have a new ear and mouth, in the form of large wooden megaphones, built by the Estonian Academy of the Arts.
French artist Aude Bourgine has a beautifully crafted series of textile art pieces that resemble coral, set within glass containers, like specimens plucked from the ocean floor