Outstanding Photos with Partial Color
September 18, 2011 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Misc
Partial color allows a designer to hone in on a particular part of an image and enhance it with color. This makes the images really “pop” and this technique can be used for many purposes. For example, in advertising or corporate designs, features of a product can be highlighted that the eye may not normally be drawn to.
When used for artistic photography, non-focal points of the image can be colored in order to draw attention to them. Whatever the use, this fresh technique is popping up all over print design and on the web, and we’ve gathered some of the best examples here for you to enjoy. This effect is easily achieved with most graphic software such as Photoshop.


The Most Attractive Manga Girls You’ve Ever Seen
May 6, 2011 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Misc
Long blond hairs, big beautiful eyes, tiny lips with lovely smile. You gonna fall in love with her, many are already in love. Talking about manga / anime girl. Her beauty and innocence and the way artist create her face expressions is worth to watch. Spend some time with this digital goddess on this valentine’s day while your real girlfriend is on her way and she will be late for sure

Design Gaping Holes in The City – Art by Gordon Matta-Clark
August 19, 2010 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Odd World
The American artist Gordon Matta-Clark (1943-78), who trained as an architect, used the urban environment and more specifically buildings as material. He arranged empty premises by, among other things, cutting out fragments. With his interventions he transformed architecture into sculpture, he exposed the soul of a building: to convert a place into a state of mind.




14 Coolest Ice Car Sculptures
August 16, 2010 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Science and Technology
Ice car sculptures may not last long or run on the road either, but they still make a mark and loved all over the world. Here we have brought you images of 14 ice car sculptures from across the globe.
McLaren F1 car



The full-scale replica of McLaren F1 car get ice form from 2 tonnes of ice and was made to mark the McLaren’s 40th anniversary in F1 in the 2006 Monaco Grand Prix.
Ford Mustang

This ice sculpture is Iacocca’s Own: The 2009 1/2 Iacocca Silver 45th Anniversary Edition Ford Mustang.
Alfa Romeo’s MiTo
Alfa Romeo’s MiTo sculpted completely out of solid ice was carved out with a chainsaw. The sculptor was made to promote the MiTo in front of almost 3000 intrepid Alfa Romeo fans in 2008. Read more
Creative Pumpkin Artworks
August 14, 2010 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Funny
Contemporary artwork uses the widest spectrum of materials to do their magic. In the world where everything has been done and seen it is very tough to achieve uniqueness that amazes your audience. Nevertheless, we still manage to stumble upon new materials and themes used to create artwork that takes your breath away. These creative pumpkin artworks are just the type of art that will settle for nothing less but your full and undivided attention. It’s really amazing what the artist was able to do with these pumpkins.






Great Skills of Rubber Women
Many of us ( by us I mean men and women) consider woman’s body to be form of art. The artistic nature of their bodies emerges when they show you what they can do with it. Women are able to flex their body beyond our wildest imagination. These rubber women will show you how it is done. No matter in which setting you put them, their amazing moves will strike your attention and amaze you. Chill out with these cool photographs!




“Stooped People” in Hyper-real Sculptures of Evan Penny
August 10, 2010 by admin
Filed under Art and Design, Featured
Evan Penny makes the kind of sculpture that is so realistic, so detailed, and so obviously a display of skill that it literally stops people in their tracks. But this alone isn’t why the artist’s work grabs the viewer.

Born in South Africa in 1953 to missionary parents, Penny became a naturalized Canadian and studied fine art at the Alberta College of Art in Canada where he concentrated on the figure and steel constructivist sculpture. It was not until after supportive encouragement from the artist Anthony Caro that he had the confidence to commit to the unpopular territory of figurative sculpture.
Penny began working as a guest lecturer and taught sculpture at various universities in Canada and the United States from 1982 until 1999. In addition he worked making prosthetic, with the most up to date technology in the film industry, for films such as Adrian Lyne’s “Jacob’s Ladder” (1989), Oliver Stone’s “JFK” (1991), Natural Born Killers (1994) and “Nixon” (1995). He also worked on David Cronenberg’s “Existenz” (1999) . Penny’s first solo exhibition in 1981 met with mixed reviews. His early sculptural works from 1979 to 1999 were commonly labeled as monstrous due to their unforgiving adherence to reality.
Large Murray, 2008



Self Portrait, 2003
