Waiting In A Bus Station
16 12 2010 Comments : 2 Comments »Categories : Art, Life
Jeff Nishinaka carves and pinches paper to create intricate paper sculptures. His meticulous sculptural 3D work appears to have been created from marble or extremely fine sand or vanilla ice cream or thick foam — definitely of something other than “just” paper.

Alexa Meade has innovated a Trompe-L’Oeil painting technique that can perceptually compress three-dimensional space into a two-dimensional plane. Rather than painting a representational picture on a flat canvas, Meade paints her representational image directly on top of her three-dimensional subjects.


Topless Sandals – water-based adhesive on the surface and sticks to the bottom of your feet.

Dust cleaning slippers – dust the floors by simply walking across them.
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You feel like you can’t get enough chocolate? Eat this…the box that is.

Steve Hanks is recognized as one of the best watercolor artists working today. Hanks calls his style ‘emotional realism’. He often leaves the faces of his figures obscured or turned away, not only to leave the face to the imagination of the viewer but also to allow the entire figure to express the emotion.

These items below were all fabricated from junked 1950s and 1960s automobile parts by James Covertt. He discovered his talent for creating this amazing pieces of art whilst running an auto recycling business in Brisbane . His first piece was an off road race buggy, inspired by a sport James had participated in for some ten years.

These sculptures are located between Interstate 40 and old Route 66 going west out of Groom, Texas and they represent the Crucifixion of Christ, the Calvary and the Resurrection. The man did this out of the kindness of his heart.
Originally the man that build all these wanted to put up a billboard with Bible verses but could never find the appropriate verse. Instead, he build the cross reported as being the biggest cross in the northern hemisphere.
