Whale sculpture made from recycled bags

Inspired by the stomach contents of a dead gray whale that washed up in Seattle a couple years ago, an art professor has created a baby whale from recycled plastic bags.

Art professor Marie Weichman told the Kitsap Sun (is.gd/a7rz9H) she got the idea for the exhibit after hearing about the debris found in the stomach a dead gray whale that washed ashore in Seattle in 2010.

That debris included sweatpants, a golf ball, surgical gloves, small towels, bits of plastic and more than 20 plastic bags, according to reports at the time.

The sculpture became a project for art, marine-science and design students. It goes on display Thursday in the college’s Art Building.

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2019324170_recycledwhale03.html

100,000 toothpick kinetic sculpture of San Francisco

Thirty five years ago artist Scott Weaver began work on this complex kinetic sculpture, Rolling through the Bay, that he continues to modify and expand even today. The elaborate sculpture is comprised of multiple “tours” that move pingpong balls through neighborhoods, historical locations, and iconic symbols of San Francisco, all recreated with a little glue, some toothpicks, and an incredible amount of ingenuity. He admits in the video that there are several toothpick sculptures even larger than his, but none has the unique kinetic components he’s constructed. Via his website Weaver estimates he’s spent over 3,000 hours on the project, and the toothpicks have been sourced from around the world:

I have used different brands of toothpicks depending on what I am building. I also have many friends and family members that collect toothpicks in their travels for me. For example, some of the trees in Golden Gate Park are made from toothpicks from Kenya, Morocco, Spain, West Germany and Italy. The heart inside the Palace of Fine Arts is made out of toothpicks people threw at our wedding.

See the sculpture for yourself at the Tinkering Studio through the end of June. Photos courtesy of their Flickr gallery.

Update: Rolling Through the Bay has been moved to the American Visionary Art Museum through September 2012.

http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2011/04/one-man-100000-toothpicks-and-35-years-scott-weavers-rolling-through-the-bay/?src=footer

Thanks to T.L. for bringing this to the It’s Interesting community.

Bart Jansen turns his dead cat into Cat-Copter

 

The kitty copter currently burning up the Internet is “half cat, half machine,” Jansen said in a SkyNews interview. Orville the deceased cat, himself named for aviation pioneer Orville Wright, was hit by a car, Jansen said. “After a period of mourning, he received his propellers posthumously.”

While Americans may be as surprised as Orville appears to be, as he soars around, spread-eagled, the repurposing of dead pets isn’t unusual outside the United States.

“This is sort of a European flavor of art making,” explained a bemused Paddy Johnson, the well-known art blogger WTF in a phone interview. Artists outside the United States have a history of finding new uses for expired household pets, Johnson went on to explain. That this dead cat can also fly, however, is somewhat new.

Another Dutch artist, Katinka Simonse, is known (and reviled) for her dead animal art projects — most infamously a purse made from her 3-year-old cat Pinkeltje. Unlike Jansen, Simonse, aka TINKEBELL, didn’t wait for nature, or traffic, to take its course. She claims to have snapped her cat’s neck herself. Yet Simonse says her work brings attention to animal suffering.

Far from endearing, Simonse’s art piece made from her dead cat earned her so much hate mail, she published what she says is just 1 percent of the torrent of anger in a book entitled “Dearest Tinkebell,” which also includes personal info about the hate mailers.

Reactions to Jansen’s “Orvillecopter” are far more favorable. Even the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals can’t quite condemn the Dutch oddity. In a statement provided to msnbc.com, PETA proclaimed:  “It’s a macabre way to honor a beloved family member.”

The Library Phantom Returns

Somebody has been dropping glorious little paper sculptures into libraries and museums all over Edinburgh, Scotland…….

http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/11/29/142910393/the-library-phantom-returns

click here for pictures of all the sculptures:  http://community.thisiscentralstation.com/_Mysterious-paper-sculptures/blog/4991767/126249.html

Thanks to Dr. N for bringing this to the attention of the It’s Interesting community.

Big Bunny in Sweden

As part of this summer’s openART biennale in Orebro, Sweden, Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman built this giant, 13-meter-high yellow bunny using local materials and craftsmen. Located near St. Nicolai church in the city center, Stor Gul Kanin (Big Yellow Bunny) questions the purpose of the public space and changes the perspective of the monuments within.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/28/florentijn-hofmans-orebro-sweden_n_939904.html?ir=Weird%20News#s342206