Tag Archives: Trash

Recycled Animal Sculptures by Gilles Cenazandotti

March 21st, 2014 | Brain, Robot

Gilles Cenazandotti 1

Gilles Cenazandotti 2

Gilles Cenazandotti - Cheetah

animal sculpture

Gilles Cenazandotti 4

Gilles Cenazandotti 5

The ocean is full of trash. If you don’t believe me, check out this post. Just like Mandy Barker, artist Gilles Cenazandotti was inspired by the mass of ocean debris which affects our habitat. The animal sculptures above (from a project titled “Future Bestiary”) were formed from recycled products found on beaches — plastic bottles, lighters, combs, bags, etc…

Speaking about his work Cenazandotti said:

“Impressed by everything that the Sea, in turn, rejects and transforms, on the beaches I harvest the products derived from petroleum and its industry. The choice of animals that are part of the endangered species completes this process.
buy vardenafil generic noprescriptionbuyonlinerxx.net over the counter

In covering these animals with a new skin harvested from the banks of the Sea, I hope to draw attention to this possible metamorphosis – to create a trompe l’oeil of a modified reality.
buy aciphex generic buynoprescriptiononlinerxx.com over the counter

You can find more work from Gilles at his site.

-RSB

[via The Inspiration Grid]

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.
buy aygestin online andnewonlineblo.com no prescription

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.
buy Cozaar online blobuyinfo.com no prescription

  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…
buy avapro online andnewonlineblo.com no prescription

and Barker’s images are a disturbing reminder — but they are certainly an aesthetically pleasing reminder.

-RSB

[via NPR]