Video: "The Art of Radiology"
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Have you ever wanted to look inside your doll as a child? A hamburger or a toy car? If so, some have found a way to make this idea a reality. And not with X-rays!
This project was named "The Art of Radiology", and all modern technologies were used here. With the help of computed tomography, the authors examined a variety of objects - there were old dolls, and some types of food, and soft toys, and toy cars and helicopters. I guess some will not like this kind of "art" - it's too strange to look at what you eat or what you played as a child. But you can learn a lot of interesting things! For example, it turns out that the Barbie doll has a skeleton, bones - everything is almost real. But if it's not scary to look at the doll yet, then it will be simply unpleasant for some to look at a hamburger or pieces of meat.
In the end, sometimes it's better not to know what the food you eat is made of. Of course, this tomography will not show this, however, food scans still look somewhat unusual. The authors believe that they have subjected to computed tomography objects that play an important role in our lives, and one cannot but agree with them. Toys, gadgets, and even more food are worthy of this kind of study. Interestingly, the creators offer you to scan any item you want yourself. You just need to write to them by mail! That is, the authors make contact, make their project accessible, and this cannot but rejoice. After all, a hamburger isn't the only thing that can be scanned.
More information about the project can be found on the website.
Recommended:
Exhibition "Free: Contemporary Art After Frida Kahlo" ("Unbound: Contemporary Art After Frida Kahlo")
Frida Kahlo is one of the first names that come to mind when it comes to women who changed the history of visual arts. The fearless surrealist has acquired an almost mythical status. At times, the amazing story of her life even overshadows the glory of her paintings, although, of course, they cannot be separated
Dark art. "Dark Art" by illustrator Erlend Mork
Norwegian artist, photographer, illustrator Erlend Mork is a master of frankly gloomy, if not suicidal paintings. As Erlend Mork himself says about his work, he draws inspiration from an obsession with philosophy, thanks to which he sees everyday life not at all what it seems to most other people. Simply put, his paintings are an attempt to imagine what is going on in the head of a mentally ill person who is forced to live in isolation from the world
Creative dinner among trees and birds. Art installation at the art fair Art Brussels
At a VIP dinner party held as part of an art fair at Art Brussels, Belgian designer Charles Kaisin presented a three-meter oak table "Fantasies of Charles", in the surface of which trees "sprouted"
"Digital art" and "living art"
Quote - “The purpose of a digital artwork is different from natural painting. Digital paintings are not created to be embodied in a frame on a wall or in a paper album. They are created in order to be replicated in a mass product - book cover, logo, website decoration, product box …"
Art Exhibition of Contemporary Art "Art and London"
From 25 to 31 October 2010, the London gallery THE LENNOX GALLERY will host an art exhibition of contemporary art "Art and London", organized by the international gallery - Galeria Zero. More than 10 artists from different countries will take part in it: from Spain, Holland, Switzerland, Germany, Georgia, as well as Russia