|
Quazen > Tags > sculpture
|
 |
sculpture |
|
|
 | | Defining Eight Types of Art | | by Launie and Melynda Sorrels, Nov 17, 2008 | | This article gives examples of why painting, sculpture, architecture, photography, printmaking, conceptual art, installation art, and performance art are considered art. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 2 |
|
 | | Oil Painting in Lithuania | | by Kelly Saunders, Nov 11, 2008 | | Lithuania borders Russia and Bilarus and offers some of the richest, hippest, funkiest art in Europe nestled in a tiny locale called Uzupis. | | Comments(4) Liked It: 7 |
|
 | | Artistic Recycling: Retro Upcycled Records | | by Paula Mitchell Bentley, Oct 28, 2008 | | Upcycling is the process of taking something of little value and increasing it's worth through transformation of the raw product. Records are a great example of a raw material that has been transformed into many different objects. However, records aren't just being made into clocks these days. There is a whole world of artistic recyclers out there putting scratched and unwanted records to great re-use. | | Comments(2) Liked It: 4 |
|
 | | Everyday Art: Amazingly Different Art Cars | | by Paula Mitchell Bentley, Oct 14, 2008 | | Everyday, normal, mundane things can be turned into something creative, interesting, and artistic with a little ingenuity. Think how much more exciting and inspiring the world around us would be if even the ordinary became extraordinary. The bizarre subculture of art cars is a great example of this. A lot of people spending a lot of time, money, and energy into making their cars portable works of art to be shown off at festivals and parades throughout the country. Take a look at some of the coolest ones that I could find. | | Comments(4) Liked It: 10 |
|
 | | Artistic Recycling: Metal | | by Paula Mitchell Bentley, Oct 12, 2008 | | This is my fifth article on artistic recycling. These articles all involve making something worthless into something priceless. It takes a lot of skill to take our cast-offs and see them from a different angle -- on of an artistic medium. Thinking what can be made of this instead of how can I get rid of this. In this article, I highlight an artist named John T. Unger and his incredible uses of scrap metal. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 8 |
|
 | | Everyday Art: Incredibly Edible Food Art | | by Paula Mitchell Bentley, Oct 11, 2008 | | This is the third part in my "Everyday Art" series which highlights mundane objects turned into extraordinary works of art. The world around us can expand from the simple and ordinary to the stunning and inspiring. These amazing food art pictures are a great example of how the ordinary can evolve into something else. | | Comments(5) Liked It: 11 |
|
 | | Everyday Art: Lego | | by Paula Mitchell Bentley, Oct 5, 2008 | | Here's my latest piece in the everyday art series. Everyday art involves taking something completely ordinary and mundane and turning it into something artistic and inspiring. The Lego brick is a perfect example of this. Everyone has played Lego at sometime or another. You can make anything out of the ubiquitous lego brick -- toy cars, little houses, star ships, boats, etc. The list is endless. You can also make some pretty cool art out of Lego too. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 8 |
|
 | | Sex Museums in Asia: Exploring Human Sexuality and Erotic Art | | by Pigggy, Oct 5, 2008 | | Sex museums are popular in Europe during the era of the sexual revolution (end of 1960s and the 1970s). In recent years, these erotic museums have been emerging in Asia as the population becomes more open-minded about sex, and I guess more will be coming up soon. | | Comments(5) Liked It: 4 |
|
 | | The Canes In-between | | by libintador, Sep 30, 2008 | | In their struggle to break through, they suffered the prescribed pain-for-starters - no pun intended; financially they are basically broke, to take on the weight of the clay for their pieces their backs suffer, and they had to push with unrelenting experimentations to be familiar with the behavior of the clay. I see them as natural phenomena, existing as they do though not by absolute intention. Likened to the supo which were not part of the chosen canes reserved for planting. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 0 |
|
|
|
| Inside Quazen |
|
/ / / / / / |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|