The French street art artist Levalet is to blame for the fact that the streets of Paris are decorated with comical graffiti that make us think. His works, the content of which is linked to the specificity of the street or the locations he explores, also have a generous measure of humor.
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The German artist Tony Spyra, currently working in Austria, gives the viewer a mentally challenging impulse with his work. By using everyday objects, his artworks give a sense of homeliness, and the viewer realizes after a while that the artist has taken him into his own thoughts about social problems.
"Street art" legend Banksy created this time in Gaza and decorated the ruins there with his motifs. With his controversial street art, he wanted to draw attention to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the consequences of which are downright terrifying. See what Banksy's most controversial street art looks like to date…
If you are also among those who are interested in the art and lives of famous artists, the following list of ten films will definitely go on your "bucket list".
Forget trophies of dead animals and instead decorate the walls of your apartment with floral art "Elkebana" by Italian design duo Fabio Milita and Studio Paula. Ikebane, or "Elkebana" plant trophies, consisting of supports that associate with horn attachments, and any flowers or branches, are a real feast for the eyes.
Illustrator, artist and author Christoph Niemann fills his "Sunday Sketches" series with sketches, which he combines in a fun way with everyday objects, which from the right perspective become something completely different from what they are. Thus, a comb is a mask of a car, headphones a mosquito, an ink bottle a camera, a poppy a hairy man's beard, a pair of socks the head of a dinosaur,...
The studio is the artist's second, if not first, home. However, the studio is an extremely important thing for artists, as they spend a large part of their lives in it. Let's see in which studios the most famous artists created and are creating and make sure that the greatest works of art are sometimes created in a real chaotic mess.
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.
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.
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.
Matthias Jung is a designer who, with the help of surreal collages, conjures up a fantasy world dominated by structurally completely impossible houses.
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.