The only blog about animals (taxidermied), ice cream, illustrations, creepiness, Oprah Winfrey, and Mary-Kate Olsen. I have a pretty broad spectrum of interests, but there are very specific themes that string together what appeals to me, creatively. Real things that look fake. Fake things that look real. Real fake things. Fake real things. Whimsy.
Jean Francois Fourtou plays with scale and proportions in his series “My House.” No digital manipulation was used in these photographs.
(Source: bloggokin.it)
James Hopkins’ “Perspective Sculptures” may look like a random scattering of materials from one point of view, but when viewed at the right angle, its second/intended image forms.
Liu Bolin explores the relationship between man and environment by blending into his surroundings. He stands for days as his assistants hand paint him to match the background.
Another mixture of real and fake - images of surrounding areas are pasted onto real life objects, in the same area of where the images were taken, creating a kind of “invisible” object.