Alex Solis is like a magician who gives life to the characters he draws by creating interactions with real items or using his own hand. For this series he named “Inkteraction”, the artist fights and tease with a quick temper boy.
Tag Archive for hands
Monumental Willow Sculptures (8 pics)
British artist Laura Ellen Bacon builds large-scale sculptures only using willow and her bare hands. Her designs blur the line of what looks familiar to the natural world while keeping control of material and form.
Chromatic Fashion Sculptures (4 pics)
British artist Laura Ellen Bacon builds large-scale sculptures only using willow and her bare hands. Her designs blur the line of what looks familiar to the natural world while keeping control of material and form.
Beautifully Imperfect Ceramic Plant Vessels (6 pics)
Melbourne-based artist Zhu Ohmu attempt to recreate the 3d printing process entirely by hand in her series Plantsukuroi. Without any formal training in ceramics, the plant holders ended up having interesting organic forms, emphasizing the crafting process and celebrating its imperfections.
Intimately Cupped Hands Cast Inside Clay Bricks by Dan Stockholm (6 pics)
Intimately Cupped Hands Cast Inside Clay Bricks by Dan Stockholm (6 pics)
Origami Inception: Paper Artist Folds Four Works From a Single Sheet of Paper (3 pics)
Vietnamese paper artist Nguyen Hung Cuong ( previously ) just unveiled this new origami work titled ” Fly High, Dreamers! ” that incorporates four sequential objects—a hand holding a crane with a rider also holding a smaller crane—each connected to the other, all from a single uncut sheet of paper.
Playful Wooden Sculptures by Camille Kachani (16 pics)
Artist Camille Kachani creates playful wooden sculptures using everyday objects and furniture: a book, a drawer, a shovel, a hammer, a stool. Anything the artist can get his hands on.
A New Book Filled With Interactive Paper Pop-up Gadgets by Kelli Anderson (5 pics)
Kelli Anderson , a self-described artist/designer and tinkerer has just released her long-awaited book, This Book is a Planetarium . Anderson, who is based in Brooklyn, works in a variety of digital and analog media but is best known for her use of paper in the form of educational apps and animations , as well as interactive tools . This Book is a Planetarium features several different paper gadgets designed by Anderson, all of which are fully functional.
From the namesake planetarium to a musical instrument, message decoder, and spiralgraph, Anderson also includes readers in the sense of wonderment by offering detailed explanations of how each gadget works.
Project Soli – When Google imagines the future of remote interactions (7 pics)
With Project Soli , a Google team is imagining the future of remote interactions, using a miniature radar to capture with a sub-millimeter precision the movements of the fingers and hands.
BRUCE WEBER SHOOTS THE NEW FRAME DENIM COLLECTION (7 pics)
Legendary fashion photographer BRUCE WEBER teams up with the creators of FRAME DENIM for their latest Autumn Winter 2017 campaign shoot. The visual conversation between denim label’s cofounders Erik Torstensson and Jens Grede came to life in a collaboration with Mr.
Soli Project by Google (5 pics)
“Soli” is the name of the new visionary project of Google . It stretches the limits of new technologies and connected objects through a sensitive captor reacting to hand movements.
ID Buzz – Volkswagen unveils an electric version of its iconic minivan! (7 pics)
Volkswagen has just unveiled the ID Buzz , a modern and electric version of its iconic minivan, a true symbol of the 1960s and 1970s! This new Volkswagen electric van will be equipped with the Modular Electrification Toolkit , or MEB , their electric motorization system combining batteries and motors.
Mad Max: Fury Road Illustrated Posters (18 pics)
Illustrator and graphic designer Christopher Cox , who we already have talked about for his posters of Kubrick , got also passionate by the last Mad Max: Fury Road .
Prismatic Sketches of Hands and Faces by Lui Ferreyra (10 pics)
Artist Lui Ferreyra draws colorful portraits of hands and faces, works that use discrete shapes of color as highlights and shadows. These geometric fragments are blended by the viewer’s eye rather than the artist’s hand, producing color fields that Ferreyra intends to call attention to the connection between seeing and language.