PNL – Pegazusok Nem Léteznek

PNL - Pegazusok Nem Léteznek

PNL - Pegazusok Nem Léteznek Music it’s dead. Too many times too many people stated this to matter anymore. I gave up on music lately because everything sound like something I already heard and I’m pretty bored. And tired.
Pegazusok Nem Léteznek it’s a relatively new Hungarian band and reminds me of Nine Inch Nails, respectively How to Destroy Angels. Pop music. Modern, consistent pop music, not that fancy lemonade!
It’s a little bit gloomy, a little bit indie, electronic and sometimes shoe gazing – or meditative if you prefer, minimalist, but catchy. It’s a strange dream, but you don’t wanna wake up from it.
Eszter Ács – vocals and keyboards, Domokos Lázár – guitar and vocals, Lázár Ágoston – drums and Róbert Németh – bass guitar find something beautiful, something of their own.
I stumbled into them accidentally while I was digging up news about one of my old favorites: Európa kiadó. Read more PNL – Pegazusok Nem Léteznek

Pietro Sedda’s Twisted Tattoos

Pietro Sedda’s Twisted Tattoos

Italian tattoo artist Pietro Sedda brings a strange new perspective to portrait tattoos by smearing the faces of his subjects across his human canvas. The result has a psychological element to it, and because of the realistic nature of the tattoos, a surrealist effect is created. The technique gives his portraits an inhuman appeal. The act of morphing the faces seems to bring out the personality of the characters. Suddenly, a facial expression that ordinarily would have been viewed as friendly and engaging becomes threatening or disturbing. Sedda’s portrait tattoos have a darker element than those of other artists’, because it is not only the subject’s facial expressions that give meaning to the design; the simple act of warping the faces creates a secondary level of symbolism. Read more Pietro Sedda’s Twisted Tattoos

Personal Saints by Raluca Bararu

Personal Saints by Raluca Bararu

The story of the Saints series began with one drawing for a group exhibit at Vatra Collective. It was suppose to be about monsters and I discovered, while doodling in-between , that monsters were for me, at that particular time, social norms. So I decided to slay some by playing with pen and paper. In the end the Saints came out to be all the inappropriate answers to those norms. Read more Personal Saints by Raluca Bararu

Abstract and Surrealist Tattoo Art by Marcin Surowiec

Abstract and Surrealist Tattoo Art by Marcin Surowiec

Marcin Surowiec’s tattoo designs are the kind of art that you would expect to find on an album cover for an electronic musician, but it looks fantastic as tattoo designs simply because it is so different from the run-of-the-mill tattoo designs that predominate tattoo culture. Read more Abstract and Surrealist Tattoo Art by Marcin Surowiec

Ice-Creams Paintings by Iraqi artist Othman Toma

Ice-Creams Paintings by Iraqi artist Othman Toma

Ice-Creams Paintings by Iraqi artist Othman Toma

Iraqi artist Othman Toma creates these paintings using melted ice-creams. If you look at his site he usually draws with pencils or paints with watercolours, these paintings are proof that you can produce art in a variety of unconventional ways. There are some out there that say that these paintings, could not have been painted with the ice-creams, Othman says that, that is what he used as his paint, maybe next time he should do a time lapse video to prove them wrong. Read more Ice-Creams Paintings by Iraqi artist Othman Toma

Street art in Er-Riadh, Tunisia

Street art in Er-Riadh, Tunisia

Street art in Er-Riadh, Tunisia

Everywhere you turn in Er-Riadh, there’s art. It’s everywhere. The ancient village on the Tunisian island of Djerba, has spent the last several months of high summer being slowly transformed from a sleepy, traditional little corner of North Africa that has never heard of street art, into a world stage for one of the most vibrant and ambitious street art projects ever imagined. Read more Street art in Er-Riadh, Tunisia

Chalk art from Columbia college of art

Chalk art from Columbia college of art

Two college students from Columbia college of art and design are creating quite a mess, but not in the literal way, they are being talked about in the entire school. They don’t steal or cheat, instead they create a creative riot, they call themself Dangerdust and every week they sneak into a classroom and create a masterpiece out of nothing but chalk.
Its not surprise that the pair are seniors in advertising and graphic design and they are most likely swamp with home work and studies, but they still find the time to do their weekly chalk art, the two creates the most amazing art pieces you will ever see. Read more Chalk art from Columbia college of art