Posts Tagged: ‘Art’

September 10, 2011

Bob Dylan’s Paintings [updated]

Because you know, being the single most recognizable name in songwritng on the planet for forty years or so just isn’t enough for a guy like Bob:

 A New York City gallery will be exhibiting 18 drawings and paintings by Bob Dylan created while the musician was touring Asia.

The Gagosian (gah-GOH’-zee-ahn) Gallery says Dylan’s Asia Series will run from Sept. 20 to Oct. 22.

The gallery says it will be the singer-songwriter’s first exhibition in New York.

They have just four images online. Tell us what you think, music and painting fans. (This one is something. It’s got a rich, musky bouquet, with and nice raisiny aftertaste. Oh wait, that’s wine. Never mind…)

Update: Dylan copied some (all?) of the paintings from famous photographers’ work. Inappropriate to not at least credit them, many say. (Us too!)

Posted by Thom

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September 1, 2011

Post-it Note Window Art

This is dang cool. There is apparently a Post-It note art craze going on in Europe at the moment. It apparently started in Paris:

In fact, across the French capital, the summer has been enlivened by a corporate collage contest known as La guerre des Post-it (the Post-it wars). The battle is between presumably underemployed office workers who are devoting large chunks of their days to sticking thousands of pink, yellow, orange and green notes on their windows to recreate pixelated images.

There’s even a Post-It War website.

Lots of photos here.

And here’s a video (in Dutch).

And it’s spreading around Europe.

Posted by Thom

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August 23, 2011

People Painting People Paintings

This is very cool. Check this out:

Nice painting, huh? Well, it is, but not in the way you think:

In essence, what Meade does is paint live models to make them look like paintings. Sound strange? Well, we guess it is, but we think you’ll agree, the finished product is darn realistic. She achieves this effect by applying acrylic paint to her subject and surroundings and then photographing everything.

“Meade” is American artist Alexa Meade. You can see much more of her work at her website.

* And thanks to Ol’ Jay for the tip.

Posted by Thom

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June 8, 2011

Hotel Rooms as Art

It’s the Hotel Fox, in Copenhagen, and, well, wow:

61 rooms, 21 artists, 1,000 ideas
Each room is an individual piece of art – from wacky comical styles to strict graphic design, from fantastic street art and Japanese Manga to simply spaced out fantasies.

A few of the rooms:

The link up top has artist info, and here you can see a slideshow with larger images of the rooms.

Posted by Thom

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February 23, 2011

The (Recycled) Art of War

Mana the Magnificent found this very cool link to a story about an American soldier in Afghanistan, and what he does in his spare time. This is what he does:

Private First Class Rupert Valero is currently stationed at Khandahar, Afghanistan, and to fill his spare time, he builds toys out of recycled materials. They capture a wonderful mix of imagination, whimsy, and craftiness, and they rank way up there with awesome upcycled goods.

The toys are made from all kinds of materials, with the limbs usually made from caps from water bottles. They’re about six inches tall, and the limbs are fully moveable.

Here’s an interview with Valero here. Excerpt:

When we are outside the wire, and interact with the Afghan locals, I take some of my little creations, and you see the eyes open wide on these little kids. I think I put in my humble talent to some use if it means winning hearts and minds of the Afghan people.

And here’s a huge gallery of his work on his Flicker page.

And: We sent PFC Valero a message on his Facebook page and asked his permission to tell his story and use his images here on our blog. He got back to us this morning—on a break from his very hard work in Afghanistan—and said he’d be honored. Our heartfelt appreciation to him. (And we’re sending a book or two as soon as we get his address.)

Here’s some more images of his work:

My personal favorite out of these: Dr. Pepper Man. Very scary. Please list your preferences below.

Posted by Thom

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December 30, 2010

Our New Year’s Gift to You: The Origami Ducky

We wanted to get each and every one of you a gift this holiday season. But, since we didn’t have everyone’s addresses, the hard part was figuring out what to get you that we could transported through the internet. So, here is our little thank you for supporting us in 2010 and for the many years before…and after: THE ORIGAMI DUCKY! (First appeared in Uncle John’s Curiously Compelling Bathroom Reader)

Print it out, make the duck, and send us a picture [unclejohnsbathroomreader (at) gmail (dot) com] to put on our Facebook page. Let’s see if we can break the record of the most origamis ever made at one time by a team. According to the record: 545 people folded 9,300 origami cranes in one hour at Singapore State University on 22 August 2006. Let the fun begin!!

Posted by BRI

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October 18, 2010

Pancake Toilet (and a contest!)-Updated

10/21/10 Update:

Thanks for all the entries. It was really hard to just pick one, so we picked two. Our winners are Macey Schnetz with 21 Cool Toilet Paper Roll Creations and Giorgio Karam with Jammin-Jones Toilet Seats. (Winners have been contacted)

We love getting links from you all! So any time you see something fun, interesting, educational, and/or bizarre, please pass them along. You never know, it could make it to our blog or, better yet, show up in one of the books.

______________________________________________________

No, “Pancake Toilet” is not the name of the next Toby Keith CD, it’s a toilet—made of out pancakes.

Looks like somebody forgot to flush.

Now to the contest. If you look at the post right below this one, it looks as though we have a theme of sorts going. We thought some of our clever readers could help keep this theme going. So put a link in the comments (you don’t have to email it!) – to something creative/toilet related, something similar hopefully to the origami and pancake toilets. You have until midnight Wednesday—and the very best link gets the brand new, 2010 “Big John,” Uncle John’s Heavy Duty Bathroom Reader, sent to the bathroom of their choice.

Good luck, have fun, go with the flow, etc.

Posted by Thom

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October 14, 2010

The Origami Toilet

When you’re done—you can use it to wipe! (Ew. Sorry.)

That is the wonderful origami artwork of Won Park. Many more photos of his work can be found here, and here. And thanks to BRI fan James Beran for sending this our way.

P.S. Want to learn how to make a origami rubber duck? Check out Uncle John’s Curiously Compelling Bathroom Reader—page 117.

Posted by Thom

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October 6, 2010

Masterpiece Hides in Parisian Flat for 70 Years

Fascinating story:

The woman who owned the flat had left for the south of France before the Second World War and never returned.

But when she died recently aged 91, experts were tasked with drawing up an inventory of her possessions [...]

Entering the untouched, cobweb-filled flat in Paris’ 9th arrondissement, one expert said it was like stumbling into the castle of Sleeping Beauty, where time had stood still since 1900.

“There was a smell of old dust,” said Olivier Choppin-Janvry, who made the discovery. Walking under high wooden ceilings, past an old wood stove and stone sink in the kitchen, he spotted a stuffed ostrich and a Mickey Mouse toy dating from before the war, as well as an exquisite dressing table.

But he said his heart missed a beat when he caught sight of a stunning tableau of a woman in a pink muslin evening dress.”

The woman who rented the apartment—who had left for the South of France and simply never returned—was one Marthe de Florian, the grandaughter of the woman in pink in the painting, and described as a demimondaine, which Merriam-Webster’s tells us is a “a woman supported by a wealthy lover.” The strange thing is that she had paid the rent all those years, while apparently never setting foot in the apartment and letting it go to the spiders. Bizarre.

And the painting? It was by Italian artist Giovanni Boldini. It recently sold at auction for 2.1 million Euros ($2.9 million).

* The painting at the top left is not the one found in the apartment. It’s another Giovanni we found here.

Posted by Thom

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August 20, 2010

“Field Book of Surgery. The Wounded Man.”

"Uh, little help?"

We’re deep on deadline here at BRI headquarters, and I’m just polishing up a page on fascinating brain facts—”Your brain is so soft it can be cut with a butter knife” is a fun one. I just came across this bit of info: The earliest known realistic depiction of a human brain was made just 500 or so years ago. Imagine that. Of all the tens of thousands of years that modern humans have been around, we didn’t, at least according to the article linked, get a good drawing of that most vital of organs—the brain—until just a few centuries ago. Almost makes you feel young, doesn’t it?

The depiction, a woodcut, was done by early 16th century German artist Hans Wechtlin. He did the wonderful work above, along with other gruesome delights, for pioneering German surgeon Hans von Gersdorff, for his book Feldtbuch der Wundartzney—or “Field-book of the Wound-doctor”—in 1517. You can see more about him, with more images, at “Parallels in Early Human and Horse Medicine.” (Nay!)

Our favorite image, by far:

The look on the guy’s face is killing me. To say nothing of him!

More here.

Posted by Thom

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