Tag Archives: Collage

Skulls from Ali Gulec

July 23rd, 2013 | Brain

Ali Gulec

Ali Gulec 2

Ali Gulec 3

Ali Gulec 4

Ali Gulec 1

Ali Gulec 5Ali Gulec is an Istanbul-based artist with a predilection for skulls.  He also runs a design studio called ikiko and his work is all over the Society6 site. I especially like the black-and-white 3D-printed looking “Lace Skull”.
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Maybe I’ll put it on a pillow

For more from Ali, head here.

-RSB

Map Anatomy from Shannon Rankin

December 2nd, 2012 | Brain

Map Anatomy from Shannon Rankin

from Shannon Rankin

Map Anatomy from Shannon Rankin

Map Anatomy from Shannon Rankin

I like this Map Anatomy concept from artist, Shannon Rankin.  Shannon is from California and now currently works and lives in Maine.  Here’s a quote from the artist regarding her interest in maps:

“Maps are the everyday metaphors that speak to the fragile and transitory state of our lives and our surroundings. Rivers shift their course, glaciers melt, volcanoes erupt, boundaries change both physically and politically. The only true constant is change.”

It’d be nice to see the topography of the maps relate a bit more to the actual anatomy, but nonetheless, the compositions are nice. For more map-inspired works and some geometric installations, check out Shannon’s website.

-RSB

[via Street Anatomy]

 

The Ocean Soup

February 23rd, 2012 | Space

Floating along, hidden beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean, you will find the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a collection of ocean trash measuring about twice the size of France.  The term “Soup” is given to the plastic debris that is suspended in the sea.  Mandy Barker, a photographer from the UK, created this series of collages to represent the global collection of refuse that exists within Earth’s oceans.
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Here is a description of her work:

SOUP is a description given to plastic debris suspended in the sea, and with particular reference to the mass accumulation that exists in an area of The North Pacific Ocean known as the Garbage Patch.

The series of images aim to engage with, and stimulate an emotional response in the viewer by combining a contradiction between initial aesthetic attraction and social awareness. The sequence reveals a narrative concerning oceanic plastics from initial attraction and attempted ingestion, to the ultimate death of sea creatures and representing the disturbing statistics of dispersed plastics having no boundaries.

All the plastics photographed have been salvaged from beaches around the world and represent a global collection of debris that has existed for varying amounts of time in the world’s oceans.

These collages are both eerie and beautiful.
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  It’s as if humans have given birth to some mysterious form of life deep in the ocean waters.  Or maybe, these are photographs from the depths of space — from some newly found galaxy.  But alas, no, we are ultimately only destroying marine environments a little bit more every day…
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and Barker’s images are a disturbing reminder — but they are certainly an aesthetically pleasing reminder.

-RSB

[via NPR]