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Photos - Art

338 followers, 140 pins

Rabbit by Gelitin via designyoutrust: A 55 meter knitted rabbit in residence in the Alps near Genoa, Italy, since 2005 and intended to stay there until 2025. #Rabbit #Gelitin #Genoa #designyoutrust

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Profile picture of Michaela Knight

Michaela Knight Seriously talented! Love it

3-D sidewalk chalk drawings by Julian Beever

Brilliant Tape Sculptures by Mark Jenkins

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A horse sculpture outside the Wynn in Las Vegas.

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New York City Gets Two Feet Of Snow!

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A Wall That Plays Music When It Rains ~ Dresden, Germany

3D pavement art by Manfred Stader

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sidewalk chalk art

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3d art by manfred stader

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Because Mickey understood....... When Jim Henson died, Disney artists Joe Lanzisero and Tim Kirk drew this tribute of Mickey Mouse consoling Kermit the Frog, which appeared in the Summer 1990 issue of WD Eye, Walt Disney Imagineering’s employee magazine.

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Woooooow!!! Ice sculpture carriage

Incredible! .... ice sculpture

3D Street Optical Illusion -- it's all flat surface

Waterfall Sculpture

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It's all about perspective, Charlie Brown.

"Hello ... My name is Inigo Montoya, you killed my father, prepare to die." - *Ummm Brilliant, whoever made this, high-five!

interesting optical illusion

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Water Lilies Morning by Claude Monet

zombie disney princesses!

"street" art of the future

Artist Herb Williams is one of the only people in the world to have an account with Crayola. I imagine him whipping out his cell phone, speed dialing Crayola Headquarters and saying “I need 40,000 Screamin’ Greens and 20,000 Tickle Me Pinks. Tonight.” I’m not sure if that’s exactly how it works, but lets go with it. This latest work by Williams, Unwanted Visitor: Portrait of Wildfire, just opened at the National Ranching Heritage Center at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. The five swirling flames made of thousands of crayons are meant to resemble the recent wildfires that ravaged the state several weeks ago. Over time, the sculptures themselves will be ravaged by the hot Texas heat, and will gradually begin to melt, turning the already brilliant color gradation into a dripping, gooey mess. Awesome right? The project began as a small proof-of-concept on Kickstarter only a month ago and is now open to the public at NRHC. Special thanks to Emily Arellano, Herb Williams, and photographer Ashton Thornhill who captured the images above. (via kelly podzemny)

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