What would you do if you knew that every time your friend looks at you, he imagines you covered in food. This is exactly what goes through the mind of Brazilian photographer Junior Luz, who packaged his bizarre vision in the Cara-Comida project - which could be translated from Portuguese as "face food" - and actually camouflaged the faces of his friends with their favorite food.
art
In the Portuguese capital, local artist Arturo Bordalo "Bordalo II" found a way to draw people's attention to the garbage that accumulates in the city. Bordalo II uses discarded car parts, scrap metal and trash to create colorful 3D animal paintings.
Micheal, who goes by the stage name Moerkey, is a talented craftsman from Australia who makes sculptures, bowls and spheres from quite unusual materials - discarded keys, but also from invalid coins, copper pipes and wire.
A street artist who goes by the name Wanksy has found a way to get those responsible to patch potholes and cracks in the road faster. Around them, he began to draw penises with acceptance. And look at it, the thing works! Things have moved on. If someone were to undertake this in our country, they would be fully employed, since as much as 60 percent of the roads in Slovenia are in bad or even very bad condition. Punch holes, etc. so there is plenty. Now it just takes someone else with the "eggs" to do it like Wanksy did.
Even Fibonacci, the founder of the Fibonacci sequence and the Golden Section, which are still a pillar of architecture today, argued that all nature is mathematically ordered and that its disorder and chaos are merely an illusion. Since it's hard to believe the words of a man who lived in the 12th century, we found a series of plants that prove that both the Golden Ratio and the Fibonacci sequence are ubiquitous in nature. Perfection of form is thus not only an achievement of man, but also of nature.
Photographer Zachary Scott has developed the idea that children these days grow up too fast into a humorous series of photos that will put a smile on your face. There are little kids dressed up as old ladies.
Alejandro Duran is an artist who creates colorful landscape art from washed-up trash from more than 50 different countries.
German photographer Dieter Klein chose an interesting subject for his photo series. He is looking for "natural" car cemeteries around the world, places where people have laid their cars to rest and are now overgrown or merged with the environment. Fascinating.
Matthias Jung is a designer who, with the help of surreal collages, conjures up a fantasy world dominated by structurally completely impossible houses.
What came first, the tree or the newspaper? Japanese artist Yuken Teruya presents the interesting art of cutting out trees from newspapers with the exhibition The Simple Truth at New York's Josée Bienvenu Gallery, and at the exhibition we can also see his sophisticated shopping bags with a starry sky print.
Maria A. Aristidou is an artist who impresses on her Instagram profile with coffee watercolors of our favorite fictional heroes. Through detailed coffee art, the artist combines her three greatest loves – love of coffee, art and popular culture.
Artist Danny Quirk impresses with extraordinary realistic "bodypaint" illustrations that reveal the inside of our bodies. With extremely vivid paintings, he shows what is hidden under the skin that covers our legs, arms, back and face. So let's check how you would look without your largest organ - the skin.