


Hanoi-based artist Nguyễn Hùng Cường creates origami animals (among other things) with a type of Vietnamese handmade paper called Dó.
He’s rather good at it. More of his work here.



Hanoi-based artist Nguyễn Hùng Cường creates origami animals (among other things) with a type of Vietnamese handmade paper called Dó.
He’s rather good at it. More of his work here.







At a local public square and the site of a former neighborhood swimming pool at Campo de la Cebada in Madrid, anonymous art collective Luzinterruptus – with the assistance of bemused locals – filled 800 extra large condoms with blue-dyed water and tiny lights to simulate raindrops. Luzinterruptus sez:
For a day we worked on the installation, aided by both children and the not so young, who approached attracted by the tempting “balloons” and who ended up happily integrating themselves into a production line in which each was responsible for a part of the process.
The youngest of our helpers thought they were making water balloons that would then serve to throw at each other, the slightly older kids were wondering about the strange shape and were excited about touching them and playing with them trying to make sure they did not slip out of their hands, the adults were laughing mischievously and could not stop themselves from pinching the surface and touching them with pure delight.
After the first few minutes of jokes and laughter had passed, everyone ended up accepting that manipulating condoms was like any other activity of daily life, and that, ultimately, was what we wanted to achieve through all of this.
Needless to say, the local kids eventually turned the whole irresistible water-balloonacy of the thing into performance art.
Which is only as it should be.

illuminations
In a combined promo for GoPro cameras and a new album by charming popsters Radiation City, sweeping pans, POVs and unexpected angles are used to capture a performance at the Cathedral Of Junk in Austin Texas in the company of ‘junk king’ Vince Hanneman.

Designer Snow Violent’s not-for-sale (yet) skull and bones sugar.
Oh, to breakfast upon the crystallised bones of one’s enemies.
Street art in Hamilton, Ontario by Canadian artist Brandon Vickerd.
Relax. They’re all dead and stuffed.
Wait. What?
You’ll like John.
For the last fifty four years, the amateur woodcarver has kicked back and whittled some, to say the least. He can carve anything out of a single piece of wood, from a block to a toothpick.
Here, he casually introduces some of his extraordinary carvings – each one more impressive than the last.
Japanese papercraft artist Nahoko Kojima carves elaborate, meticulously detailed animals, textures and natural scenes from single sheets of paper, which she displays encased in acryllic sheets and as 3D artworks.
More of her work here.