
Robotswillkill
All images from www.woostercollective.com and www.streetsy.com (great sites)
This entry was written by , posted on September 22, 2009 at 10:56 pm, filed under Art and tagged Art, Ethos, Faro, Robotswillkill, Street Art. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.
A Brazilian artist by the name of Henrique Oliveira has been creating organic shapes out of scrap wood that began to peel off of a fence by his home. The type of wood used called Tapumes (in Portuguese) is pretty common in Brazil and is pretty useless after a construction site is finished. Henrique Oliveira creates swirling and bulging organic shapes using these wood peel scraps. His process involves creating a PVC pipe underframe structure to which he attaches the wood peels. View more work at his website here. Recently he has been featured in the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans in which he created clouds of pillows and mattresses collected after Katrina. More pictures after the jump.


This entry was written by , posted on April 17, 2009 at 11:19 pm, filed under Art, Eco-Friendly and tagged Art, Eco-Friendly, Henrique Oliveira. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.
Born in Honolulu, HI in 1983. Ekundayo experienced a whirlwind of a childhood living the life of a fugitive with his father who kidnapped him from his mother when he was only 5 years old.
After stumbling upon one of his uncle’s graffiti sketch books, Ekundayo latched onto art as a means of comfort and joy in an otherwise uncertain and glum world.



This entry was written by , posted on April 9, 2009 at 3:53 pm, filed under Art and tagged Ekundayo. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.
The site is all new. And since its fresh, lets start out with something ridiculous.
This guy is crazy good. Check out all his work at: www.mwmgraphics.com But for now just
feast your eyes on these things.





This entry was written by , posted on April 6, 2009 at 9:01 pm, filed under Art and tagged Art, Matt W. Moore. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.