Transformed Objects Wall Installations of Sakir Gokcebag
It’s not surprising that Sakir Gokcebag has a Ph.D. in art, because his work is very smart. It’s also transformative.
It’s not surprising that Sakir Gokcebag has a Ph.D. in art, because his work is very smart. It’s also transformative.
Zac Freeman is resourceful and inventive artist who creates expressive portraits out of recycled junk and found objects.
John Grade was born in 1970 in Minneapolis and currently lives and works in Seattle
Hirotoshi Itoh graduated from Tokyo National Fine Arts University in 1982 and later went into his family business as a stonemason.
Yayoi Kusama was born in 1929 in Japan and started using dots as early as ten years old.
John Dehlsen is an Australian environmental artist who started as a painter and stumbled into creating recycled art by accident.
I discovered these wire mesh flying figures on Flickr and was instantly charmed by their whimsy.
There is a quirky and fleeting quality to these snow sculptures by Hongtao Zhou.
Haroshi is an avid skateboarder who translates his love of the sport into colorful handcrafted sculptures.
Life-like sculptures that are full of realistic details, except for their size.
Installation artist, sculptor, and lighting designer Bruce Munro created a magical outdoor light installation.
Jeff Nishinaka originally wanted to be a painter but some class assignments led to his new passion, creating paper sculptures.
Artist Bundeli Patrik aka 2much applied his creativity to a bunch of ping pong balls.
Did you ever cut construction paper into strips and loop them together to create a paper chain? Jen Stark’s sculptures will make you look at colored paper in a whole new way.
Goldsworthy gently shapes leaves, snow, ice, twigs, feathers, rocks, and other elements, blurring the line between man-made and natural beauty.
Five artists merge recycling and creativity into breathtaking works of art.
The intersection of literature and art is more than just a pretty cover.
Dalton Ghetti uses a razor and a sewing needle. Working an hour or two a day it takes months or years to complete his miniature masterpieces.