Another part of a series of prints made from an etched copper plate for my printmaking class.
Another part of a series of prints made from an etched copper plate for my printmaking class.
These are a part of my series of copper plate etchings for printmaking class.
Here’s a shot of my setup for tomorrow’s Ceramics critique. I’ll upload photos of the individual pieces tomorrow after class. These took me waaaay too long to make, but I’m really happy with the result. The patina on some of these is really fascinating. Unfortunately they’re not functional, because my Ceramics teacher is an art nazi who thinks that functionality immediately makes things domestic and banal and not Art. So I made some Art.
Now I don’t have to post filler any more because that huge silkscreening project I was talking about is finally done!
Good Ol’ John.
But seriously, these are really lovely. I like that they are all unique, with a varied yet cohesive glaze palette.
Sean Avery’s broken CD animal sculptures.
See more here.
These are some pictures for a project for photography class. I photographed jello from underneath a glass shelf, and it was pretty fun to do as well. The only problem is that I don’t know which of these to get printed for wednesday, just one really big one, or a few smaller ones, or what. Any thoughts?
This is a positive/negative pinhole photo that I took using a camera made out of a whiskey can with two holes poked in it, some black paint, and two small pieces of an aluminum pie plate. Since it had two holes, I did two separate exposures in different areas. In the top part of the image, you can see a faint outline of my ghost-looking self.
[Please click to full view]
This is my recent sculpture project… I know it doesn’t look like too much on here but it was more interesting irl. Materials are: canvas, spraypaint, newspaper, acrylic paint, plastic shapes, LED light, fishing line, glue/water mixture, tape, permanent marker, handmade paper scraps, small paper stars, leaves/sticks, magazine clippings, ribbon, glitter glue, googly eyes, and a small bell.
Artist Mathijs Sterrenburg brings the power absorption ability of Kirby to the Mushroom Kingdom in his illustrated Mushroom collection.
Inhale the shroom, power up, cause total chaos, rinse and repeat!
Super Mario Shroom Concepts by Mathijs Sterrenburg (Behance)
Squirtle just wanted to fight beside the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, but his cover was quickly blown. Excellent TMNT / Pokemon fan art by Bryan Lee.
Related Rampage: Blanka
You’re not one of us by Bryan Lee (CGHUB) (Facebook)
Via: hello-zombie
The land of Hyrule gets it’s own Zelda inspired shirt design by our new Tumblr artist Jason Tracewell. Vote his work up at 604Republic to see it go to print.
Hyrule Shield by Jason Tracewell (Tumblr) (Facebook) (Twitter)
Via: jasontracewell
Ice King grew bored with terrorizing Princess Bubblegum, Finn and Jake so he traveled to the Mushroom Kingdom to stir up some trouble. Scott Weston’s mathematical shirt design is now up for vote at Qwertee.
Mario’s Adventure Time by Scott Weston (RedBubble) (Facebook) (Twitter)
Some of the classic video game characters of our childhood are back and looking a little old thanks to artist Adam Ellis!
8.5” x 11” prints of his original watercolors are on sale ($15) at his online store.
All Your Art Are Belong To Us by Adam Ellis (Flickr) (Facebook) (Twitter)
Via: Kotaku
Three ghostly family members went their separate ways in the gaming industry. This family portrait by Darick Maasen ties them back together.
You can now head over to Threadless and vote this shirt design up.
Retro Gaming Family Ties by Darick Maasen (Facebook) (Twitter)
Via: darickmaasen | gamefreaksnz