Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
Kris Kuksi makes these startling sculptures, aptly named Church Tank, with the same macabre overabundance that has garnered such attention from the likes of Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labirynth).
“A post-industrial Rococo master, Kris Kuksi obsessively arranges characters and architecture in asymmetric compositions with an exquisite sense of drama. Instead of stones and shells he uses screaming plastic soldiers, miniature engine blocks, towering spires and assorted debris to form his landscapes.The political, spiritual and material conflict within these shrines is enacted under the calm gaze of remote deities and august statuary. Kuksi manages to evoke, at once, a sanctum and a mausoleum for our suffocated spirit.”
Photographer Ray Demski and climber Alex Luger shot a project called “Ice Nights” entirely at night with the use of powerful flash units and a medium format camera.
It is no small feat to snap crystal clear shots of the very rapid movements of insects and their wings.
Biochemist and photography enthusiast Linden Gledhill used a cross beam trigger system called StopShot manufactured by Cognisys.
Gledhill explains:
"The external shutter opens in about 10 milliseconds 10x faster than the DSLR can react and that is why its important to have access to a very fast acting external shutter. If the camera’s shutter was used the insect would be out of the field of view before its shutter could open. Because of this, high speed photographs are typically done in a darkened room to avoid this lag (ie on bulb mode). An external shutter allows insect to be captured in full sun. "
Do I need to disclaim that anything about the Kama Sutra is sexual in nature? Well, consider yourself warned/enticed.
The Kama Sutra Project A-Z is an amazing project from London-based French designer Malika Favre.
In a follow-up to Long Exposure of Lighted Wakeboards at Night from Red Bull, we have Motion to Light Paramotoring.
Australian artist Ben Frost uses the McDonald's french fries container, boxes from pharma and other packaging as his canvas in a street art style subversive series of pop art pieces. The full series on his site is deliciously dark and dapples in the pop art genres of hentai and erotic cartoons.
From his bio:
“Subverting mainstream iconography from the worlds of advertising, entertainment and politics, he (Frost) creates a visual framework that is bold, confrontational and often controversial.”
Vimeo user Pachacutek created this delicious tilt-shift timelapse of the ancient city of Machu Picchu.
Matt Molloy uses 100 to 200 individual photographs to composite these vibrant and surreal images of the sky.
Both a microbiologist and a visual artist, Zachary Copfer has created this innovative scientific technique to grow bacteria in a Petri dish to create an image: ‘Bacteriography‘.
Find him on Kickstarter where he’s trying to raise $8000, so he can bring them out of the lab and into galleries.
Canadian Jason de Graaf creates these acrylic paintings that test your own eyes, so detailed, so attuned to the nuance of perception, light and perspective. They seem almost unbelievably photographic.
From wikipedia:
A bestiary, or Bestiarum vocabulum is a compendium of beasts. Originating in the Ancient world, bestiaries were made popular in the Middle Ages in illustrated volumes that described various animals, birds and even rocks. The natural history and illustration of each beast was usually accompanied by a moral lesson. Reminds me of course of Borges' Book of Imaginary Beings.
Redditor gyyp imagines, with the help of photoshop, a compendium of beasts. I would love, as a writing exercise, to come up with a name and moral lesson for each. Anyone help?
Hraffonallard - The wit and temper of a duck with the grace and strength of a mustang, the Hraffonallard learns early on the emotional triggers of its opponents, delivering, on its powerful back, the one person that will undermine the confidence just moments before physical confrontation.
Super fun stop-motion surfing video.
The project page describes this crazy-stupid-amazing-daring video as:
Wingsuit / BASE-jump athlete Alexander Polli does the never before done—a tactical flight through a narrow cave on a rugged mountainside. The flight starts with a jump from a hovering helicopter, Alexander reaches speeds of 250 km/h (155 mph) while following a precise trajectory leading to the cave opening, he then fully commits and flies directly through the narrow opening of the "Batman Cave!"
London-based photographer Andy Day shoots parkour and freerunning and has built up quite a collection of startling images and frozen moments from daring action sequences.
Artist Shayna Leib on her Wind and Water series:
"Two of the most powerful elements on our planet are nearly indiscernible to the human eye, yet we are innately aware of their presence, their capacity to soothe and destroy, and their ability to weave patterns where they touch."
Adrienn Banhegyi performs with Cirque de Soleil and holds two world records for jump roping.
Michael Shainblum created this stunning and crisp timelapse of his native San Diego:
"I wanted to showcase San Diego from the eyes of somebody who has lived there their entire life. I have been working on this piece for about four months to really harness the details and create a visually striking Timelapse film. I wanted to make something that was unique to my own perspective of filmmaking. I also wanted to create this video to encourage people to go out and witness how beautiful San Diego really is."
Slovenian photographer Matej Peljhan's photos from his series ‘The Little Prince’, show 12-year-old Luka, who has muscle dystrophy, doing the things he longs so do but can't. Clever and moving.