Related, Triangle

Related, Triangle

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Ken Unsworth. Suspended stone circle, 1978-1981 at the Art Gallery NSW

Ken UnsworthSuspended stone circle, 1978-1981 at the Art Gallery NSW

(via ironeisen)


Jonathan Latiano, Points of Contention 

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Related, sticks

(via designcloud)

Dornröschen (Sleeping Beauty)
by Louis Sussmann-Hellborn, 1878,
Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin, Germany.

Dornröschen (Sleeping Beauty)

by Louis Sussmann-Hellborn, 1878,

Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin, Germany.

(via superkintaro)

Barberini Faun (Bacchus), marble copy of a bronze original, ca. 200 BC

Glyptothek, Munich http://www.antike-am-koenigsplatz.mwn.de/glyptothek/sammlung/large_3.html

Barberini Faun (Bacchus), marble copy of a bronze original, ca. 200 BC

Glyptothek, Munich http://www.antike-am-koenigsplatz.mwn.de/glyptothek/sammlung/large_3.html

(via ironeisen)

MOMO and Eltono

Improbables, 2012

Two artists install bits of found wood with a hand saw and rubber mallet, into 52 cellar door and window spaces particular to Besançon, France. Using only tension to hold these in place, they demonstrate a variety of arrangement possibilities across a range of spaces in the city. The results may go unnoticed (as artwork) until enough are recognized and associated as such.

We were inspired largely by the types of urban modifications, barriers, and repairs on buildings that demonstrate odd solutions, curious physics, or appear to be total mysteries. So we titled this “Improbables.”

Here is a video about a residency he did in Monterrey at El Narval.

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Related, other public space artists:

Bankview art installation

SpY

Brooms

Matt McVeigh

Trolling#1 
chrome plated steel miniature shopping trolleys
approx 73cm (high) x 87cm (wide) x 23cm (deep)

Trolling#1 is the first sculpture to be exhibited in a series exploring consumerism and its resulting social issues. By creating an infinite shape through the repetition of a shopping trolley, I hope to reference the instability of our culture in the dogged pursuit of more - “When too much is never enough.” This is the premise that is driving the other sculptures in a series on affluence

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More shopping carts

(via artist-influences)

Robert Morris, Labyrinth

Robert Morris, Labyrinth

(via shinoddddd)

(via crystalhabit)