Google Chrome Features in an artsy stopmotiony installation piece.
THE BLACKOUT / AS ABOVE, SO BELOW
In accordance with the various levels of reality: physical, mental, and spiritual, this relates that what happens on any level happens on every other.
Anti was a part of the Blackout exhibition (Crud) in New York.
Art Direction & Design:
Fredrik Melby, Martin Yang & Kjetil Wold
Photo:Mathias Fossum

A director of fables, fairy tales, and fantasies, with an aesthetic that incorporates the Gothic, the Grand Guignol, and German Expressionism, Tim Burton has created a body of films—fourteen features released over two and a half decades thus far—that reveal an uncompromised auteurist vision. Burton’s striking visuals and indelible characters make even his blockbuster studio films intimately personal. From adaptations to musicals to stop-motion animated films, his work bears a distinctive, unmistakable point-of-view, and his unique interpretations of well-known comic and literary characters, real-life personalities, and beloved childhood icons have resulted in creations that sometimes surpass their sources. Along with his frequent collaborators—including actors Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter, composer Danny Elfman, production designer Rick Heinrichs, and costume designer Colleen Atwood—Burton has crafted a new canon of beloved characters, from Edward Scissorhands and Beetlejuice to Jack Skellington and the Corpse Bride.
From his Netherlands studio, Peter Jansen creates beautiful sculptures of human movements in space and time.
Scratching The Surface is the street art of Portugal’s Alexandre Farto (aka Vhils).
Starting his budding career as a traditional graffiti artist, Vhils has since taken to exploring less conventional mediums, manipulating his imagery into layers of torn away billboard advertising, etching into metal, and chiseling his work directly into walls.
Vhils’ work is currently showing through August 6 at the Lazarides gallery, London.
(via 30gms)
Mano del Desierto (Hand of the Desert) is an 11-meter-tall hand protruding from the Chilean Atacama Desert. Native sculptor Mario Irarrázabal completed the monument in 1992.
Check out the Flickr search results for Mano del Desierto.
Also, if you haven’t yet browsed the most excellent Atlas Obscura, you should.
Zapatos que Rompen el Silencio (Shoes that Break the Silence) is the name of this installation by Antonio Gonzales Paucar, made out of dead flies, nylon thread, and shoes.




















