Japanese art has been considered exceptional and unique for many centuries. This time, it is presented in their own way by Japanese painters who poured their imagination right onto the walls of the rooms of the Tokyo hotel.
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Japanese skateboarder and self-taught sculptor Haroshi has creatively combined his two passions to present stunning and stylish images of pop culture.
The images of some artistic paintings are so embedded in our everyday life that even those who are not close to art are familiar with them. This type of work has already been reproduced countless times, but this time's recycling did not produce classic replicas, as it did not follow the accessories of the original author. The brushes were thus replaced by the trigger, and the canvas by the mirror. The re-creation was created with a camera and without digital 'application'.
Some say that anyone can be an artist. Perhaps true, but certainly not every talented artist. And the proof is these incredibly talented artists, whose artwork you will have to look at more than once.
Usually, we don't need much convincing when it comes to chocolate. Unless you follow a strict diet, few people can resist it. Even the biggest chocoholics can have trouble with these incredibly realistic Sarah Hardy chocolate products. The British woman disguises chocolate as a human heart, insects, fossils, frogs, etc. and so realistic that they fool anyone.
30-year-old Jago Jacopo Cardillo from Italy taught himself sculpting - with tireless work and endless love for this art form. Cardillo is living proof that perseverance and patience can go a long way. Today, he creates incredibly realistic statues that even Michelangelo would be proud to sign. You can see them in the article.
The construction of skyscrapers always exceeds the limits and represents the might of architecture. South Korea chose a different approach. They will build an "invisible" skyscraper on the outskirts of Seoul.
The exhibition by the artist Nina Sarabutra invited visitors to walk through 100,000 miniature porcelain skulls in search of their own imprint, which a person leaves behind with every step, right up to the last one.
Nipples of Venus is an interesting art project where the artist creates with a woman's breast instead of a brush. He paints these with acrylic paints with various patterns and then prints them on the surface. And again and again a unique imprint of a woman's breast is created.
The Tequila Cloud is exactly what you imagine. A cloud that rains drops of tequila. It is a marketing move by the Mexican Tourism Office, which invites tourists from Germany to its places. Well, he convinced us too!
"Today we live with the awareness that an art object can be anything and an artist can be anyone," said academic sculptor Marjan Drev. Like him, we also disagree with this, although today there are no more boundaries, because if art can be a snow shovel and a urinal, art can be anything! The latest such example is a scene from the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco, where teenagers secretly placed glasses on the floor, and visitors mistook them for an art installation and reacted as expected. No, they didn't get angry, but rather tried to immerse themselves in this "artistic" work, and some of them even enthusiastically photographed the "work".
Australian artist Paul Kaptein explores the meaning of the present as a consequence of the past and an opportunity for the future through stunning, hand-carved wooden sculptures. Through the expression of images of modern society, his works play with the perception of the observer, who remains somewhere in between - between reality and fiction.