Not sure if I credited the right person, if you can read Chinese: please confirm for me
Forest Blending Acrylic Glass Statues
Imagine walking through a forest and seeing just a glimpse of these invisible figures! They’re the creative work of artist Rob Mulholland, who makes these sculptures out of mirrored Perspex (or acrylic glass). It has been called the Predator effect after the 1987 film where an alien life form seamlessly blends into its background. Mulholland has previously installed these chameleon-like figures in the woods around Alloa, Loch Ard and the David Marshall Lodge in Scotland.
Mulholland told BBC Scotland that the key to the effect was creating a distorted reflection. “It alters reality, one moment you see them and the next moment they blend in. There’s an ambiguity to it - it doesn’t answer all the questions.”
It’s Community Time! Abed and Troy become Finn and Jake in this not-so-unbelievable mashup from powerpig. Available at RedBubble as tees, prints, and iPhone cases.
Paige Smith of A Common Name and of A Common Blog painstakingly crafts these beautiful folded paper geodes to fill lonely voids in the urban Los Angeles cityscape. Paige makes spends her time making these and installing these so that the public may experience the joy of finding a glimmering hidden treasure where they might least expect to find one. Her work is in fact so beautiful that most of her geodes have been removed and presumably taken home by greedy art lovers. If anyone has any information as the the where about of any of these works of art please call 213-973-9931.
Philipp Haager, Field Phases, 2010
Yes, Color Field is alive and well.
I need to start on some of these. BEAUTIFUL juxtaposition of tone and hue.
caught my eye .
Oscar de la Renta 2012.