Flickr realy is a great site to share photos with your friends and the internet at large. Here is a treasure of classic photographs setup and reshot with lego blocks by Mike Stimpson in the UK. If you like his work you can buy prints of them .


| Classic photographs done in LEGO | Jun 07 2008 Ryan |

Flickr realy is a great site to share photos with your friends and the internet at large. Here is a treasure of classic photographs setup and reshot with lego blocks by Mike Stimpson in the UK. If you like his work you can buy prints of them .

| Robot art | Jun 05 2008 Ryan |

The term robot originates from the Czech word robota, meaning “compulsory labor.” It was first used in the 1921 play R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots) by the Czech novelist and playwright Karel Capek. The word robot has been used since to refer to a machine that performs work to assist people or work that humans find difficult or undesirable.
Unfortunately for the human race, robots will eventually become self aware killing machines and exterminate everyone who doesn’t move to an underground city. I’m not really sure what robots do after the humans are gone, but that really doesn’t matter. This more than likely outcome is a great starting point for robotic based artwork. There are many many sources for robot artwork out there. From digital works to paintings to sculptures, I’ve posted some of my favorite below.
How to Survive a Robot UprisingOne of my all time favorite works of fiction is the book, How to Survive a Robot Uprising. In this little gem you will learn such things as:
This really is a great short book, it appears also that they will be making it into a movie. One can only hope anyway.
Jeremy Mayer, a California artist, does all kinds of neat sculptures and CAD drawings. ” Mr. Mayer stresses the importance of quality of materials used and attention to detail that resonates with each work. His larger sculptures can take up to 1,200 hours to complete, and the drawings (often done with use of CAD and 3D modeling programs to assist in constructing each figure before hand-rendering) can take up to 200 hours.”
Just look at these amazing robot sculptures he made out of old typewriter parts.
I love this little guy. He has been around for a little while now and I would probably buy one of the aluminum, brass, cast resin and glass sculptures if I had any way to display it. My purchase will have to wait until I move into a bigger place maybe further out from the city. It would be glorious to have a little army of these guys.



“With years of accumulating post-consumer waste and a lifetime of absorbing pop culture imagery, Nemo Gould has been creating his signature style of kinetic metal and found object sculpture for over 20 years. Old vacuum cleaners, dead bugs, used dentures and sewing machine motors all find their unerringly rightful place in his surreal creatures and abstract sculptures, which have attracted museums, galleries and eccentric art collectors throughout the Bay Area and abroad.”
Nemo is just amazing. Look at some of these pieces:
I found this awesome and very inexpensive Robot pin over on etsy for only $5.
“I made this Jet-Age Robot pin using images of actual vintage robots and transforming them into a Brooch. Printed paper on wood and laser cut with incredible detail.
Image protected with clear finish. Reverse painted black with locking pinback. Measures 2 1/2″ high x 1 1/4″ wide x 1/8″ thick.”
The only problem is I don’t have any use for a pin. I can just see the package arriving at home to my wifes excited hands. She rips open the box to see a small robot pin, all her hopes of jewelry or plane tickets to some exotic location smashed. I would get that “why did you buy this” look I get when she sees a piece of art I bought that she just doesn’t understand.
I love robot books and movies and art, so how could I not create my own? My work can’t compare to the amazing works I’ve found and put here, but I want to show you what I’ve been influenced to make. BEHOLD!
So these are some of my favorite pieces I’ve found around. Please share any others you know of that you like.

| Kentucky Yard Sale Yields a Trove of Weegee Images | Jun 03 2008 Ryan |

I always love these stories where an unsuspecting individual accidentally buys artworks worth millions at a yard sale for $.50 and a tuna fish sandwich. Okay so maybe that isn’t the exact story here but it is close.
Two Indian women bought a trunk at a Kentucky yard sale which just so happened to belong at one time to Wilma Wilcox, “a social worker who was Weegee’s companion and lived with him from 1957 until his death in 1968″. When Wilma died in 1993 she left most of his work to the International Center of Photography in Manhattan.
Fortunately the women who found the pictures and documents took them to get appraised instead of throwing them away.
“We’re just lucky that it all survived,” said Martin Krause, the museum’s curator of prints, drawings and photographs. “The woman who found them thought maybe these were just old family snapshots or something — though how you could mistake a Weegee for a family photograph, I don’t know.”
For more information you can read the full New York Times article.

| Bankrupt offices, a series of photos by Phillip Toledano | May 26 2008 Ryan |

Phillip Toledano has a pretty spectacular photo series of bankrupt offices. I really suggest you check them out, they are all on a single page easily navigated.
Phillip is a London born artist who currently lives and works in New York City.



