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.
modern art
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.
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.
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.
The works of conceptual abstract painter Piet Mondrian have become part of pop culture.
Books are not only for reading, but we can also use them to show our creativity. James Trevino has 1,100 books in his collection, but on social networks, where he is followed by 130,000 people, he became famous not because he is a bookworm, but because his imagination is inconceivable.
Alejandro Duran is an artist who creates colorful landscape art from washed-up trash from more than 50 different countries.
If you've ever wondered how people with very poor vision see the world around them when they take off their glasses or lenses, you'll get a closer look at that view in these oil paintings.
Russian street artist Rustam Qbic is already a well-known name to fans of graffiti and similar urban art. Qbic has an incredibly surreal imagination that surprises us every time with his drawings, illustrations and, of course, especially with his street art.
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.
The idea behind the project is to make a wristwatch that needs literally nothing to work. But did the team behind the project succeed with Solid State Watch?
Multidisciplinary artist Bina Baitel's wall clock is a mix of device and meditative sculpture, with massive eyelashes instead of hands.