Astonishing Murals Installation

Artist: Fat Heat

Budapest, Hungary, street artist Fat Heat created this awesome image of a giant red bird on cellophane that is wrapped around two trees.



The piece was created at an event called "Akvárium" in Budapest.



The technique shown here is called CelloGraff and was invented by two French graffiti artists Astro and Kanos. By using cellophane, no damage is done to buildings or structures, and no laws are broken. This makes street art and the freedom to creatively express oneself easier to promote in a responsible way.

Source: mymodernmet

Check his website: http://fatheat.hu/tag/effects/

Artist: Yoan Capote

Cuban artist Yoan Capote used around 500,000 fishhooks to build a serene seascape mural.

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The 26-foot-wide mural called Isla (Seascape), was assembled out of half a million intertwined fishhooks, nails and oil.

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Yoan Capote took about 6 months to complete his fascinating fishhook mural with the help of 30 assistants.

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“I decided to use fishhooks in this series because I wanted to create a tension between beauty and seduction and danger and entrapment.”

Check his website: http://www.yoan-capote.com/

Artist: Ran Hwang

We've seen Hwang's amazing works of arts in my previous post, and are pleased to see her newer astonishing works.







Brooklyn-based Korean artist Ran Hwang uses buttons, beads, and pins, carefully aligning each component to produce these amazing images of temples and cherry blossoms, by hammering down thousands of pins adorned with tiny embellishments like sequins into wood panels.





"The process of building large installations are time consuming and repetitive and it requires manual effort which provides a form of self-meditation. I hammer thousands of pins into a wall like a monk who, facing the wall, practices Zen."





Images taken from here

Check her website: http://www.ranhwang.com/

Artist: Mia Liu

Taiwan-based artist Mia Wen-Hsuan Liu transforms generally flat paper forms into three dimensional sculptures.



"I like to draw freely, and is particularly mesmerized by the unique textures created by drawing on different papers; therefore, I love to discover different papers from my everyday life to use as my creative medium, and the medium itself also leads to the inspiration for my installation works."



This installation, entitled Can't Stop Rolling It Up, was originally a drawing that was enlarged onto 144 full sheets of watercolor paper and then cut and curled into strips and attached to an aluminum board.



"The outcome is not only a drawing, but is also a further step in indicating to the viewers the artist’s individual dream."





Images taken from here

Check her website: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mialiu/

Artist: Shelley Miler

Montreal-based artist Shelley Miler uses sugar and edible blue paint to create incredibly detailed murals on the side of buildings.





Shelley applies cake icing using a common pastry bag and paints them with edible blue paint.



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Images taken from here

Check her website: http://www.shelleymillerstudio.com/

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