For some reason, I’m very drawn to Ken Wong’s fish images, despite their anatomical strangeness…
These characters also caught my attention:
See more of his work here.
For some reason, I’m very drawn to Ken Wong’s fish images, despite their anatomical strangeness…
These characters also caught my attention:
See more of his work here.
Normally I hate being in front of any kind of camera, but when I see Natalie Shau’s gorgeous, compelling photography…I must admit I wish I could be the subject in one of these fine creations.
I had posted about her illustrations before. And now I’m going to revel in her photography. Vivid, surreal, beautiful, enchanting…
I think I will have to save her whole body of work so I can occasionally glance at them and get lost.
Previous Natalie Shau post here
Artist site
Although I’m largely opposed to the idea of food in pill form (since eating is one of the finest pleasures in life), this is a pretty fine looking meal tray:

Love the movie…love this piece by Teetering Bulb.

Yeah, this is how most of my days start too…

Oh model in your lovely spine dress, I hate to see you go but I love to watch you leave…

Great photograph by Helen Warner:

ACTION JEANS! My ACTION SWEATPANTS actually have some of the same properties. Gotta be prepared if a fight breaks out while I’m scouring the Internet for art and reading science books in my room.

With the sheer proliferation of puns in this text, it must be self-aware, right?

On a related note, I’ve posted about vintage parade floats before, but here’s a new favorite:

I’m not sure what it says about me that I put this image in my “Valentine” folder:

And while we’re on the subject of art, leave it to Regretsy to design this handy measurement tool for the less desirable side of some artistic personalities:

I’m not a camper, but I want this tent! Makes me want to venture out into the wilderness (which may or may not mean my own backyard).

And I’ll finish off with the desktop dose of confusion; trading cards seen on Agence Eureka.
I happen to be out of town right now, but I wish I could see Thomas Woodruff’s Four Temperaments show in person. These lushly colored alchemical fusions of flora and fauna are undoubtedly a treat for the eyes up close.
Color schemes and themes reflect the four temperaments: sanguine, choleric, phlegmatic and melancholic (named after the ancient theory of bodily humors).
My favorite creatures in this beastiary are the Batterflies:

See the rest of the exhibit on line at the P.P.O.W. Gallery.
Claude Verlinde is responsible for one of the paintings I would most like to live in:
He has a few delightful book scenes in his gallery.
This is his magical concept of a library:

I’m forever on a quest for hourglass representations in art, so I was happy to find this:
And of course I must feature his wonderful work with skeletons…
Step into more of Verlinde’s surreal scenes here (click on the images to see detailed larger sizes).
I am completely in love with Noah Doely’s photographs.
Perfectly surreal little worlds in sepia, with just the right amount of macabre, mystery and wonder…
See more here.
Suspicious Anatomy just took a flying leap to the top of my book wish list.
This project arose from the combined efforts of writer Wythe Marschall and multimedia artist Ethan Gould (of the Hollow Earth Society).
After staring at a Cognitive Neuroscience textbook continually over the past few months, I immediately became enraptured with Gould’s illustrations.
From the Suspicious Anatomy website:
In the tradition of John Hodgman, David Cronenberg, and H. P. Lovecraft, The Human Cranius explores an alternative anatomy at once mesmerizing and deeply unsettling. Gould and Marschall ask: What do we know about our own bodies? The answer: Very little…
Suspicious Anatomy does not purport to represent or speak on behalf of anything; it seeks rupture with discourses. Or should we say, with the discourses that it, in some ways, reminds us of. Because Suspicious Anatomy is not a discourse, and cannot prove anything. It is pure Surrealism—the mutilation, combination, and recombination of discourses (or, at the molecular level, of images and words associated with those discourses) towards the Impossible Discourse: The (Unconscious) Mind. Or, in our case…? The Unconscious Body?
Click on the images for a slightly larger view and be sure to examine the details and read to the absolutely brilliant labeling.
I have, at times, been known to invent body parts, but could never be quite so adept at illustrating them. I cannot wait to get my hands on this and lose myself in the “physio–psychomological quandaries” of the Shadow Self made flesh.
See more illustrations from the book here.
Scott Moore incorporates two perspectives in his delightfully not-to-scale retro style oil paintings.
As much as I admire the technique and surreality, I must admit that my first thought was “I’d love to be a tiny woman running around with that massive food!”
I imagine sinking into giant pillowy donuts…swimming in cocoa…doing my neuroscience work on a pile of toast…
See more in the galleries.
Obstaculum is a beautiful photo series by Craig Hunter Parker which he describes as “collective arcane glimpses of our real and surreal boundaries.”
The glowing, hazy, cinematic surreality is simply gorgeous…
Are you lost in it yet?
Recently I received a reader suggestion for Romanian artist Adrian Borda.
I do like a nice bit of surrealism in the early evening…
Here we have wonderful elements of worlds merging and colliding. Man, machine, animal, music…
See more here.