In Bed with Space Invader
An epic video documenting a night with Space Invader.
Animals Inside and Out and Frozen In Time
From the same team that created “Bodies: the Exhibition,” a new exhibition at the Natural History Museum of London peels away the skin of hundreds of species to reveal their anatomies.
“Animal Inside Out” opens in London on April 6, 2012 and runs until Sept. 16, 2012. It features about 100 specimens displaying the structure of many creatures.
The animals were preserved using the technique of plastination which was used by Gunther von Hagens in the “Body Worlds” exhibit.
Here, a woman examines a plastination of a shark.Booking my ticket to London in 3…2…1…
(via sacredprostitution)
Rocky, 2011
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Uncommissioned (ha)
Philadelphia, PA
(via 2fat4fashion)
Frozen Explosions, Part Dos by Alan Sailer
Alan shoots things with pellet guns. That should probably be enough for anybody, but he also documents it with a high speed camera, catching the unfortunate object mid-asplode-y. I posted some of his kablooey’s before, but Alan really likes to shoot things, so I thought it was worth another look. See all his asplosions over at flickr.
(via satansees)
Dead Drops
Berlin artist, Aram Bartholl started Dead Drops during his artist residency at EYEBEAM in New York during 2010. Dead Drops is an anonymous, offline, peer-to-peer file-sharing network put into public spaces. A USB flash drive is embedded into a wall and made accessible to anyone.
The first 5 Dead Drops (clicking here will show you where in each of the locations) were done in NY - wonder if any are still out there?
87 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn, NY (Makerbot)
Empire Fulton Ferry Park, Brooklyn, NY (Dumbo)
235 Bowery, NY (New Museum)
Union Square, NY (Subway Station 14th St)
540 West 21st Street, NY (Eyebeam)But I’m super pysched, because according to @KelaniNichole, a dead drop just showed up in Philly across from Independence Hall in Old City.
I’ll race you there!
(via idsettleforless)
Cave to Canvas’s day of posting William Kentridge’s artwork inspired us to share this video, in which the artist talks about his fascinating process. Enjoy!




