How cool is this? (The question is rhetorical, but the answer is VERY, VERY COOL.) Remember when I told you that the artist behind the excellent Hipster Animals website was
Enrique Marty‘s sculptures depict everyday life with exaggeration. He begins by making molds of actual people, and then he plays with proportion. In this way, his work is
I’ve previously blogged about illustrator/comedian, Dyna Moe, whose Hipster Animals are “like Richard Scarry characters [at] a Grizzly Bear show.” Last time, I wondered if my closest hipster animal was the Social
It’s been done by Jason Mecier (Whitney Houston in pills; Snoop Dogg in pot), Desire Obtain Cherish (dead celebrities in pills) and even that dude Dusty on Bravo’s
Looks like Jason Mecier‘s got a little competition in the category of portraits of dead celebrities made with pills. Desire Obtain Cherish peddles a blend of street art and socio-political hi-jinx that I
Everybody seems to be drawing something on Draw Something. For the uninitiated, Draw Something is a hugely popular app that adds a social dimension to elements of Pictionary and Hangman.
I wonder how quickly artist Jason Mecier began crafting this portrait of Whitney Houston after news broke of her death? In the genre of pop art, you’ve got
The man behind Inspector Cumulus, wonderful Welsh illustrator Jonathan Edwards, is giving you the gift of you. Creaturized. By him. I’d better let him tell you. (Imagine the following in
Remember Jason Mecier, the San Francisco artist behind those portraits of pill-popping celebrities made with pills? Mecier used the same technique of vice-as-medium on noted bong enthusiast Snoop