New animations from Dublin based physics graduate and gif jedi David Whyte.
Previously: Dizzy Gifs
New animations from Dublin based physics graduate and gif jedi David Whyte.
Previously: Dizzy Gifs
The geometric water colours of Jacob Van Loon (Above: ‘8th & Main’ [1,2 and video], ‘Pershing’ [3,4] and ‘Haish’ [5,6]). Grids of boxes drawn and redrawn over layers of white-out fluid, like abstract architectural plans, sometimes neatly filled, sometimes haemorraging colour. Sez he:
By the time I have a final sketch, the layers of primer are caked up and full of valleys and ridges created by broad brush strokes. “When I’m ready for color, it’s not just about pragmatically filling in the spaces, it’s about putting paint down, letting it travel in the valleys and ridges, and seeing where and how it all comes to rest.

Artist in residence at Bowdoin College in Brunswick Maine, John Bisbee uses nails and only nails – bent, welded, hammered and soldered together – to form his extraordinary geometric sculptures.

All-new eye-contusing mathematical animations by David Whyte, created using the visual arts friendly Processing language.
More updated daily on his Bees & Bombs Tumblr.
Previously: Bees And Bombs
Mariano Tomatis applies the wonderful troll physics of the Missing Square Puzzle to a 4×6-square bar of chocolate.
Watch it. Give a knowing snort. Watch it again.
Mind blowNOMNOMNOM
Short sleeved geometry by DaveHax.
As you’ll see in comments, Dave’s technique may not be new, but it does focus on the shirt, as opposed to its contents.




54 year-old British engineer Simon Beck spends up to ten hours a day tromping around in snow shoes to create these huge geometric forms, much to the delight of cable car passengers at Les Arcs ski resort in France.