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The Seeds: Can’t Seem to Make You Mine
"Brains"
A series of brains made out of different objects and materials for Men’s Health Magazine. The series includes brains made of toothpaste, newspapers and fruit with chocolate.
Kyle Bean is a creative with a passion for craft and conceptual thinking. He creates playful, imaginative work for a variety of clients that appear in editorial and commercial projects as well as installations for luxury fashion brands and events. Encompassing set design, illustration and sculpture, Kyle’s work is usually characterised by a whimsical and meticulous reappropriation of everyday materials and handcrafted techniques.
Kyle has been featured in a range of art and design publications and has gone on to exhibit at the Art Directors Club and the International Design Biennial as well a having a solo show at Colette in Paris. Having recently given talks at various events and universities throughout the UK, Kyle also enjoys sharing his passion through public speaking.
Although Kyle often works on smaller projects alone, he regularly enjoys collaborating with still life photographers and directors.
hype-society asked:
Awwww baby!!! Don’t thank me….I’m sooooooo happy :] I Love you more than anything.
Thanks for being mine :]
Erick Swenson - Untitled (2004)
“Inspired by museum exhibits, set design, film special effects, and model making, Swenson crafts every minute detail of his tableaux, creating simulated, highly romantic scenes that often exceed the ideals of nature.
Spanning more than 7 meters, Swenson’s Untitled is a sub-zero oasis of mythical blizzard. Styrofoam snow and polyurethane ice engulf expertly moulded cobblestones, fabricating a spectacle of wintery Bavariana fairytale.
Within the gathering drifts, a fallen deer strains against death in a sublime allegorical moment.”
Jean-Baptiste Courtier | on Tumblr (France) - Natation synchronisée
Jean-Baptiste Courtier is a young photographer working and living in Paris. Originally from North of France, he arrived in Paris searching for something, but without any precise idea. After working in radio stations and sound studios, it was when he started working in a model agency that his interest for photography was born. Courtier’s work corresponds to something fun that he dreams to see in real life. He shoot his pictures in a traditional way with a large format camera, 4x5 films. His photographs aim to capture something he has done in the real life and represent a personal challenge, like a performance or a magic tric. Courtier wishes to express through his work some kind of poetry: “Frankly, I’m quite égoistic in the way I work. I want to have the pleasure of recreating the images that exist in my mind and prefer to let the viewers to create his/her own story around the picture.” Please visit artist’s website or follow his Tumblr for more discoveries.
[more Jean-Baptiste Courtier]
Canadian artist Zachari Logan creates paintings and drawings that examine masculinity and nature. Using his own body as his primary model, Logan transforms the human figure into an allegorical landscape in his latest series, “Wilderness Tips.” Logan uses his penchant for realism to manipulate nature, creating works that are shrouded in mystery. While we are accustomed to seeing female figures lying supine or posing romantically, Logan’s work takes us by surprise by inviting us to examine the male figure as an object of beauty. Take a look at a few works from “Wilderness Tips” in addition to some older pieces below.
MORE: http://hifructose.com/2012/12/06/zachari-logans-surreal-exploration-of-nature/


