Culinary designer Iven Kawi from Jakarta has shown us in a series of photos some extraordinary culinary creations that mimic a terrarium filled with flowers.
With the 8th Gibanica between March 8 and 11, Ljubljana will once again be the epicenter of contemporary Slovenian dance creativity. This is the most important contemporary dance platform in our country, where the local public has the opportunity to get an overview of the quality of two years of dance creativity, and the artists to reflect on the quality of domestic dance creativity.
Multidisciplinary artist Bina Baitel's wall clock is a mix of device and meditative sculpture, with massive eyelashes instead of hands.
Just like the Museum of Illusions in Ljubljana, the premises of the Brussels art gallery ING Art Center and the ERES-Stiftung in Munich honestly play with human perception. This was done by Peter Kogler, a world-renowned Austrian artist who made you question your senses with his monochromatic graphics.
Hipster nativity scene Modern Nativity is a modern version of a traditional nativity scene. Are you wondering what the famous Nativity scene would look like if it happened in 2016? Today, the Holy Three Kings would not arrive on camels, but on Segways, and Joseph and Mary would necessarily take a selfie with Jesus.
Street Art 2.0 is an art project by Philippe Echaroux, in which this Frenchman uses light instead of sprays and, in contrast to graffiti, otherwise the most typical representatives of street art, his works harmlessly intervene in the space. For his last canvas, he chose a tropical rainforest, where by projecting portraits of the Surui tribe onto the treetops, he drew attention to the problem and consequences of excessive deforestation.
Do you have too much money? Don't know where to go with it? But maybe it can keep you warm like Pablo Escobar's family once did. The unusual coffee table is the work of Barcelona-based Amarist Studio and Alejandro Monge and is the latest contribution to their Too Much? series of artworks that expose the vulnerabilities of money and its true value. The glass table, which holds a burning pyramid of 50-euro bills behind the case, creates the illusion that the money is actually burning with the help of a flame on top.
Two artists – a painter and a computer animator – joined forces for a series of gifs that are real works of art and will literally suck you into the screen. Who would have thought that gifs would one day also have artistic value.
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.
Alejandro Duran is an artist who creates colorful landscape art from washed-up trash from more than 50 different countries.
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.