A PHOTOSET

iheartmyart:


Mike Pelletier
: Lucy Skull

In 2011 I was invited to create a piece for an exhibition called “Ctrl-Z” curated by 3d artist 

Eric Van Straaten. This was a group exhibition of artworks created by various 3d printing processes. 

The model of the skull was generated from a friend’s dental tomography scan. The form of the object was created by creating an array of copies of the skull, where each successive copy of the skull is scaled, rotated, and moved. The skull starts at life size at the front and ends up rotated 180 degrees and two times larger than life at the back.”

(via myampgoesto11)

Reblogged from THEREMINA
A PHOTOSET

theremina:

vagosphere:

Quirky miniature porcelain sculptures made by Ukranian artists Anya Stasenko and Slava Leontyev

Reblogged from THEREMINA
A PHOTOSET

runesonmymemory:

All content copyright © Haruko Maeda
http://harukomaeda.blogspot.com/

Reblogged from THEREMINA
A PHOTOSET

paleoillustration:

The Kennis brothers are amazing. If you like the reconstructions I just posted or the Thylacoleo illustration, you need to go to their gallery and admire the rest of their work.

These guys are amazing! Definitely click hru to see their work! http://www.kenniskennis.com/site/sculptures/

A PHOTO
Reblogged from THEREMINA
A PHOTO
Not sure what’s going on here but I like it!

Not sure what’s going on here but I like it!

Reblogged from Illustrated Anatomy
A PHOTOSET

archiemcphee:

Art + Science = Awesome

These are miniature paintings created in petri dishes and they’re part of a year-long project by San Francisco-based artist Klari Reis entitled Daily Dish 2013.

“Every single day in 2013 San Francisco-based artist Klari Reis is creating an abstract painting inside the confines of the humble petri dish, a cylindrical container used by biologists to culture the growth of cells and algae, something the paintings seem to directly resemble.”

Some of the pieces look like fantastic planets or galaxies. They’re each so beautiful and different from each other and it’s only the beginning of March, so we’ve still got nearly 9 months of daily petri dish paintings to enjoy. 

[via Colossal]