søndag 25. mai 2014

mandag 19. mai 2014

fredag 16. mai 2014

Robotized

Now I'm looking forward to the exhibition may 21.: Departure 20 14

torsdag 8. mai 2014

Tools



These are the tools I have used so far in my practical aesthetic project.
Trying my way out. 

Norbert Roos



The antilope is not a DikDik, it is a Cape Grysbok. I got it from Norbert Roos. He hunted it three years ago in South Africa (not far from the city George in a province called Cape). The antilope is active by night. the area is a typical South African bush, not so many large trees, but many small bushes. This link shows you the Antilopen Cape Grysbok where he got shot.


THANK YOU NORBERT ROOS!
(Professor - Section of Physiology and Cell Biology at University of Oslo)

fredag 2. mai 2014

Cape Grysbok

The beginning of a New life for the Cape Grysbok, finding out what's inside...

torsdag 1. mai 2014

Damien Hirst

Mother and Child Divided is a floor-based sculpture comprising four glass-walled tanks, containing the two halves of a cow and calf, each bisected and preserved in formaldehyde solution. The tanks are installed in pairs, the two halves of the calf in front of the two halves of the mother, with sufficient space between each pair that a visitor may walk between them and view the animals’ insides. Thick white frames surround and support the tanks, setting in brilliant relief the transparent turquoise of the formaldehyde solution in which the carcasses are immersed. The sculpture was created for exhibition at the 1993 Venice Biennale and was subsequently the focal point of the 1995 Turner Prize at Tate Britain (then The Tate Gallery), the year that Hirst won the prize. It is now in the collection of the Astrup Fernley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo. Hirst created Tate’s copy for exhibition in the Turner Prize Restrospective at Tate Britain in 2007.

Glass, painted steel, silicone, acrylic, monofilament, stainless steel, cow, calf and formaldehyde solution.

Abraham Poincheval

Abraham Poincheval first performed Dans La Peau de l'Ours - Inside the Skin of the Bear - at the CAIRN Centre for Contemporary Art in Digne last year. Hunting and Wildlife Museum in Paris. According to the Musee de la Chasse et de la Nature, Poincheval is a performance artist "familiar with extreme situations".

The performance piece will see him eat, drink, sleep and relieve himself within a man-made chamber, housed within the sterilised carcass of a bear, while being filmed by two cameras.

BBC

onsdag 30. april 2014

Clock part

Ripping more things apart. Amazing clock part

Process photos




Pics from my of dividing the animal from its stone. 
This turned out to be a longer process than imagined. 



torsdag 24. april 2014

Zahir Batin

Zahir Batin
The epic and unforgettable cultural phenomenon that is Star Wars left countless fans in its wake who were inspired to interpret that universe in their own way. Zahir Batin, a talented Malaysian photographer, combines his talent for photography with paper art and miniature figures to reinterpret the Star Wars universe in his own way.
Zahir arranges various miniature toys and figures into creative scenes and shoots them from close-up to make them seem like actors in his own personal Star Wars-themed adventure. Some of them are humorous (especially the ones with anatomically incorrect figurines), but many do a good job of creating drama, suspense and emotion.
What’s also great is that Zahir shares the behind-the-scenes work that goes into his photos on Facebook. Because he shares his techniques with us, anyone with a bit of photography and Photoshop experience and some time can borrow from his techniques to create their very own dramatic scenes. He uses strings, wires and twigs to position his characters, using Photoshop to remove these aids from his final product.

lørdag 12. april 2014

Harvezt - The Dark Side of the covers


Album artwork has given pop-culture some of it's most iconic imagery that has been appropriated and manipulated by artists again and again. Artist Harvezt has taken a new approach to album art inspired artworks by creating the the opposite perspective. Harvezt's series titled The Dark Side of the Covers reverses the iconic scenes so that they are visualized from behind. Harvezd album artwork

torsdag 10. april 2014

Nastya Ptichek


Based in Kiev, Ukraine, Nastya Ptichek home page has inserted pop-up windows and social media icons into classical paintings. Cheeky and humorous, this series imagines the thoughts of the figures in each painting—that is, if they used social media to express themselves. One funny example shows that “God” has had too many Facebook friend requests, and another “denies” souls accessing heaven after they have died. 

Titled ‘Emoji Nation’, these artworks have been altered to reflect how people behave in today’s digital age. 


lørdag 29. mars 2014

My great grandmother and great grandfather´s clock



When I asked my grandmother if she had an old clock or something similar i could use for my project, she offered me this amazing clock. 

fredag 28. mars 2014

Miss Pokeno




Alannah Currie is a London based artist who builds deliberately luxurious chairs around uncomfortable and often provocative narratives. She works under the name Miss Pokeno.
Born 1957 in New Zealand Currie trained as a radio journalist and came to London in 1977 attracted by the idea of a punk revolution. The same South London squats which incubated the Slits and the KLF hatched Alannah’s first political actions – she formed an anarchic girl band called the Unfuckables.

Claude Jones


Sydney based artist, Claude Jones, creates hybrid, mutant and anthropomorphised sculptures, prints, drawings and mixed media 2D images that question our complex and contradictory relationship with other animals. Originating in New Zealand, Jones has travelled extensively, studying, teaching, undertaking residency programs and exhibiting in Australia and abroad. Recently Jones won the painting and drawing prize for “Its Liquid International Art Prize ”, followed by 2 solo exhibitions in Europe. The artist’s works are represented in numerous public and private collections including Artbank, The Art Gallery of New South Wales and The Rhode Island School of Design Museum in the U.S.A.

Christiaan Zwanikken


Dutch artist Christiaan Zwanikken creates kinetic works of remarkable ingenuity from found animal skulls and bones. He transforms these parts into moving mechanical sculptures and installations. Their composite natural and mechanical make-up gives these figures their own unique character. He breeds these new species in a 400-year-old monastery located in a remote village in Portugal. He also works in Amsterdam and New York.
His work has been widely exhibited nationally and internationally and can be found in the collection of the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Gasunie collection, Netherlands Media Art Institute and numerous other public and private collections.
Zwanikken’s installations are like interactive Wunderkammers, configurations of hybrid, techno-animalistic figures, that come to ‘life’, responding to the viewer and to each other. Zwanikken plays nature – against artificial – against viewer removing any authoritative role: his hierarchy is governed by a different order. Due to the unpredictability of the computer-aided elements, it is not certain who responds to whom, and who is looking or being looked at.
By making technology seem to be ‘out of control’, Zwanikken ironizes the hype around interaction in media art and the illusion of smooth-running communications. As a rule his installations demonstrate human or animal conduct and thus serve as a handle for investigating and critiquing nature and behavior. His fusion of organic and inorganic materials mashed with interactive technology demonstrates the evolution and de-evolution of sculpture in the twenty-first century.

Jaguar Parts E-type



Alex Randall


The Pigeon Pendants have been one of Alex’s most publicised and controversial pieces. However, not everyone has the space to hang thirty birds.
Instead a single beautiful specimen is mounted carrying a light in its beak. With their wings raised in flight the angelic nature of these birds is obvious.

The piggy bank

Designed for anyone who has far too much money and loose change, this is the piggy bank of all piggy banks. Its a real piglet that has been taxidermied and inserted with what all piglets probably dream of as babies, a coin storage unit and a cork plug. Make your plush overpriced apartment complete with this little guy.

"The piglet bank will take up to 12 months to produce from the time of order. We expect half the money up front and half when the piglet had been completed. Just so you know that we don’t actually kill the Piglets, they die of natural causes and these are the ones that we use."

Dimitry Valchev





Dimitry Valchev constructs of metal and impressive steampunk sculptures. To create these works you can use any unnecessary items: spark plugs, filters, springs, etc. Bulgarian artist attaches scrap a different shape. Steampunk sculptures are like insects, birds, and fantastic creatures.

Theo Jansen's Strandbeests


The home page: strandbeestSelf-propelling beach animals like Animaris Percipiere have a stomach . This consists of recycled plastic bottles containing air that can be pumped up to a high pressure by the wind. This is done using a variety of bicycle pump, needless to say of plastic tubing. Several of these little pumps are driven by wings up at the front of the animal that flap in the breeze. It takes a few hours, but then the bottles are full. They contain a supply of potential wind. Take off the cap and the wind will emerge from the bottle at high speed. The trick is to get that untamed wind under control and use it to move the animal. For this, muscles are required. Beach animals have pushing muscles which get longer when told to do so. These consist of a tube containing another that is able to move in and out. There is a rubber ring on the end of the inner tube so that this acts as a piston. When the air runs from the bottles through a small pipe in the tube it pushes the piston outwards and the muscle lengthens. The beach animal's muscle can best be likened to a bone that gets longer. Muscles can open taps to activate other muscles that open other taps, and so on. This creates control centres that can be compared to brains.

Lisa Black


Lisa BlackFixed Fawn, Taxidermy Fawn, antique mixed metal Components
Lisa Black is a Sculptor, Jeweller and Artist based in Auckland, New Zealand, born in Australia in 1982. 

Her love of animals and their form, combined with a preoccupation with an imminent future where technology and biology are intimately combined, led her to create her ongoing series of modified animals.

Transformers from car parts




World of designers : students build massive transformer out of spare parts in china. 

torsdag 27. mars 2014

Dik-dik

dik-dik is a small antelope in the genus Madoqua that lives in the bushlands of eastern and southern Africa. Dik-diks stand about 30–40 cm (12–16 in) at the shoulder, are 50–70 cm (20–28 in) long, weigh 3–6 kg (7–16 lb) and can live for up to 10 years. Dik-diks are named for the alarm calls of the females. In addition to the females' alarm call, both the male and female make a shrill, whistling sound. These calls may alert other animals to predators.



This is my new roommate, hopefully we will figure each other out and stay happy together forever. 

African wildlife foundation - Dik-dik
Miniantilope 

My dads chess clock



This is a chess clock i got from my dad, maybe i can use it somehow. You can even spot his name on the back. 

Weekly Artwork


Weekly Artwork from Persbårten videregående skole

Pantha du Prince - Bell laboratory


Hendrik Weber, better known as Pantha du PrincePanthel and Glühen 4 is a German electronic music producer and DJ

2020 media futures

2020 media futures is an ambitious, multi-industry strategic foresight project designed to understand and envision what media may look like in the year 2020; what kind of cross-platform Internet environment may shape our media and entertainment in the coming decade; and how our firms and organizations can take action today toward capturing and maintaining positions of national and international leadership.

onsdag 26. mars 2014

Mike Libby - mechanical bugs




Artist Mike Libby uses real insects and mechanical parts to make his amazing Mechanical bugsBorrowing from science fiction and fact, Insect Lab customizes real insect specimens with antique watch parts and other technological components. From ladybugs to grasshoppers, each is individually hand adorned, and original a unique celebration of the contradictions between nature and technology.

tirsdag 25. mars 2014

Elmgreen og Dragset - The named series

The named series, the surfaces of which consist of white wall paint carefully removed from prominent museums and public galleries by professional conservators, using techniques employed to restore frescoes and murals. The thin layer of removed white wall paint is then applied onto raw canvas and framed, so that this ordinary, typically valueless and disregarded 'background' is transcended and becomes painting with a new worth and significance. Each bears the name of its former home - such as Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich; Serpentine Gallery, London - and when viewed together, the subtle variations in texture, shade of colour and quality of the paint become apparent, indicative of the self-presentation of each institution.


Elmgreen og Dragset - Sparrow

A sparrow lying on its back in its death throes is the latest exhibit at the Tate Modern in London. On closer inspection, it is an animatronic model. Or is it? Here are 10 possible views: 10 interpretations of a dead sparrow

mandag 17. mars 2014

15 Famous Landmarks Zoomed Out To Show Their Surroundings





15 Famous Landmarks


This collection of photographs of majestic landmarks around the world do a great job of just how important framing, perspective and lighting are to a photograph. All of these photo pairs are of the same object, but the changes in perspective can make them seem more or less grand.
A change of perspective can change a lot, which applies just as much to photography as it does to anything else in life. Sure, the Brandenburg gate and Mount Rushmore are majestic when framed the right way, but they can look mundane when they aren’t the central focus of the photograph they’re in.
Aside from the composition of these images, some of them also show just how misleading photography can be. Most of us probably imagine that the Taj Mahal is surrounded by pristine gardens because it’s always photographed from the same angle. But the squalid garbage dumps behind it tell another tale. Anyone who hasn’t been to Niagara Falls might think that they’re surrounded by a beautiful national forest instead of a series of tall buildings built on the lip of a nearby cliff.
Of course, not all of these photos reduce the landmarks’ grandeur. The Acropolis, the Arc de Triomphe and New York City’s Central Park all arguably look even better or at least look great in a different way in their second photos. The zoomed-out photos of the Acropolis and the Arc only serve to highlight how those landmarks are focal points of their cities.

fredag 31. januar 2014

Swedish House Mafia - Vodka commercial


Mechanical dogs gives inspiration to the concept of robot animals


Afke Golsteijn and Floris Bakker

Idiotsis the Dutch artist duo Afke Golsteijn and Floris Bakker, whose work combines taxidermied animal parts with industrial or domestic materials. The contrast is always striking.

Brooke Weston

Her work is primarily made from old taxidermy and almost all recycled material. Almost all of her pieces share the concept of small worlds and dioramas situated in objects. She gathers inspiration from antique fairy tale illustrations, amusement parks and artists like Bosch and Joe Coleman.

Walter Potter



Dr Pat Morris talks about the quirky world of