


Butterfly’s Eye View, beautiful installation by artist Eiji Watanabe consisting of hand-cut paper butterflies. Heavenly. Soooo in love with this. (via)


Rolling Through the Bay, a kinetic sculpture of San Francisco, 35-years in the making and comprised of 100,000 toothpicks. Created by Scott Weaver (via)

Closet, 1997–98 (detail) A New York couple’s empty bottles and unwanted household objects, wood, wire, plaster, found objects, electrical parts …all completely covered in glass beads by Liza Lou.
(Liza Lou’s work is so over-the-top meticulous, I don’t think there’s an artist out there who can top her OCD. Love.)
Year Sampler documents a small sample from each week’s find of plastic objects from various beaches around the UK. By Steve McPherson
January. Found postcards, junk-mail, paperback book covers, cut and adhered to 9 cradled hardpanels, 2010 by Laurie Frick
Enormous paper-cut tapestries by Tomoko Shioyasu (via)

The Ingenuous, December 2010,
Strips of tracing paper and thick paper by Nathalie Boutte
Plot (l) 2010 map, acrylic, pins, adhesive, paper 15” x 15” by Shannon Rankin
For one of his most recent artworks, Sam Winston cut every word from a copy of Shakespeare’s ‘Romeo and Juliet’ and separated them into three categories: passion, rage, and indifference. He then cut each letter individually and worked them into patterns. The collage below is ‘Passion’.
Modular Origami. Insane!
“‘Birth-day’ charts the 100,000 lives that come into being over the period of 12 hours on the planet. I drew a circle for every life born in a waking day.” - Sam Winston (via)
Armelle Caron
(Source: enparticulier.files.wordpress.com)
(via willyarms, designdust)