(via heyheyrox)
Source: yagohortal.com
Source: giorgiobaroni-illustrations.comVarious works by Giorgio Baroni
Giorgio Baroni initially went to Politecnico di Milano to study Industrial Design. After his first semester there, he quit and went to Scuola del Fumetto to take a three-year Illustration class and graduated in spring of 2005.
finnishyourcheese:
These make me think of cave paintings. I wonder if that’s where McNaught may have gotten some of her inspiration?
Source: slowartday
Source: arthackdaySpine by Jonas Molander, photo credit: Simon Rudgård 2013,
#arthackday #arthack #largerthanlife
Source: vvolare“Off II” by Johan Rosenmunthe
Through digital communication like Facebook, Twitter, online dating and personal websites, the representation of our personality becomes more and more streamlined. We have the possibility to project an idea of how we are as a person into the world around us, but with the constant option of censoring information and invent fictional characteristics. Never have we had access to so much information about each other, and never has the information been so unreliable.
Source: artandsciencejournalMitch Payne’s Renewable Energy
In this collaborative photo series, photographer Mitch Payne worked with designer Kyle Bean to develop images of the micro systems of renewable energy. The goal of the series was to strip the systems to their simplest possible signifiers. As Payne describes this motive,
“It’s important not to over-complicate the subject, I think science can be as much a visual thing as a complicated spiral of information. When things are visually as simple as this, it can be easier to engage with a subject. For this particular series, each image depicts a glass tank housing various setups acting as ‘energy sources’ that power a light bulb.”
In the same vein as his series on the periodic table, Payne’s work focuses on how to represent movement and energy on an abstract level. The artist bounced around ideas with Bean and art director Gemma Fletcher on how best to interpret the systems in a simple and self-explanatory manner. The results — keeping the systems inside of the tank concentrated the message and focused on the materials that create energy. As with many of Payne’s works, this series aims to educate and enhance the viewers perception of current events within the scientific umbrella.
The artist also wants readers to know that he is looking to collaborate with scientific writers on various subjects. If you have an interesting column or subject and would be interested in creating a “Photographic Essay,” get in touch here.
gorgeousyworgesy