Honestly WTF

Silent World

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With some clever camera trickery, artists Lucie & Simon have captured some of the world's most populated cities completely devoid of any human activity. The result is a series of unimaginable, apocalyptic-like photos -

Money Pieces

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How cool are these sculptures constructed from international bills? Canadian artist Kristi Malakoff skillfully folds, cuts, and pastes paper money from all over the world to create three-dimensional polygons.
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Cardboard Ladies

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Dame di Cartone, Cardboard Ladies, is a series of portraits where women mimic 17th Century, cubist, and fifties fashions - only they're wearing dresses made of cardboard and paper instead of fabric! Swiss-Italian photographer 
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Yago Hortal

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I'm loving the smeared, marbled, and vibrant strokes in artist Yago Hortal's acrylic paintings . . . they're so wild and dynamic yet wondrously controlled. What visual eye candy!
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LA Marquees

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I love old signage and theater marquees. Océane Buret, a recent transport from Paris, has beautifully captured LA's most historic and famous landmarks with just a point and shoot camera. Don't you wish they still made them like they used to? 
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Sand Paintings

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With a rake as his only tool, San Francisco based artist Andreas Amador creates large scale sand paintings primarily on beaches along the California coast. Andreas usually waits for a 
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Van Portraits

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After seven years of painting 30 van portraits, Artist Kevin Cyr will be having a solo exhibition at the Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York City from May 19 through June 16, 2012. Inspired by 

A Due Colore

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I still can't get over how Alberto Seveso can make something as simple as ink in water look so captivating. Each photo, in his latest series, captures duos of vibrant pigments, entwining in the most breathtaking and sensual way. Honestly, wonderful.
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