July 17, 2008

20 Examples of Awesome Geek Art


This unidentified individual is clearly a big fan of html. For the uninitiated, the </head> and <body> tags are used to define areas of a web page.


This ‘futuristic motorbike’ called ‘Unlimited Drive’ is made entirely of computer and VCR parts. Created in 1995, this piece measures 18” x 7” x 7”. The wheels are magnetic discs from old computer hard drives. It was created by Alex Andromeda, who has also made dozens more sculptures of recycled computer parts.


Like ASCII graffiti, ASCII art consists of pictures created from 95 printable ASCII characters and also loosely refers to text-based art in general. It can be created with any text editor, though ASCII artists now often use programs to convert pixels to ASCII. This image, showing Ian McKellen as Gandalf in Lord of the Rings, was created by ‘Yet Another Language Geek’.


These two paintings depicting Mario and Luigi from ‘Super Mario Bros.’ Are called ‘Rough Night Out’ and ‘Rougher Night Out’, respectively. They’re by artist Bob Dob, who seeks to give his woesome bad-boy characters a sardonic aura of humor and pain.


Glasgow, Scotland based artist Klingatron reflected the sentiments of millions of geeks worldwide with this bit of graffiti, ‘I’m only popular on the internet’. Klingatron only recently got started with stencil graffiti after buying a book on the subject in 2004.


This giant VHS sculpture pays tribute to 2001: A Space Odyssey. Seattle artist David Herbert created this 2×4x8-ft sculpture of foam, plexiglass and latex paint.


You have to be a pretty big Trekkie to get your entire back covered in portraits of Spock, Kirk, Picard and Data, from left to right. Then again, Star Trek fans tend to be a pretty devoted bunch. Few people would argue that this qualifies as a very geeky piece of body art.


In another Star Trek-themed work, artist Deborah Sperber has created this piece called ‘Spock, Kirk and McCoy Beaming In (Barely There)’. The truly amazing thing about this is that each character is actually a beaded curtain. Sperber threads thousands of colored beads onto threads to create the portraits.


There’s nothing quite as geeky as a giant portrait of Stephen Colbert made of 768 Rubik’s cubes. Artist David Litwin says, “What does one do with 768 cubes once you’ve made your company logo? I spent way too much time getting them stickered properly to just leave it at that. No, you move on to doing other pictures. I had considered great works of art (Mona Lisa, etc.), but thought a tribute to Stephen Colbert would be more fun.”


This tattoo adorns the chest of one ‘MC Router’, the ‘queen of nerdcore’. The 22-year-old from Texas also has ‘geek life’ tattooed across her knuckles. Nerdcore, in case you’re wondering, is a subgenre of hip hop characterized by themes relating to nerd life including Star Wars, computers and science.


There have been literally thousands of interpretations of the Mona Lisa, but none that pay tribute to Princess Leia of Star Wars quite so artfully as this one. Artist Jim Hance said that as of late June he was still working on this painting, but it looks great to us already.


If you’ve ever wondered what the skeletons of cartoon characters like the Roadrunner, Tom & Jerry or Bugs Bunny look like, artist Hyung Koo Lee has created a series called ‘Animatus’ that imagines exactly that. The sculptures are made from resin, aluminum, stainless steel wire, springs and oil paint. Pictured is ‘Anas Animatus’, which you may recognize as Dewey, Huey and Louie from ‘DuckTales’.


Paul the Wine Guy found this instance of Mozilla Firefox-inspired graffiti while working on his ‘IT everywhere’ photo series. IT graffiti is getting more and more common, with everything from Microsoft references to pixelated hourglasses and cursors being spray painted on all manner of surfaces.


Mike Rea creates these awesomely weird sculptures including a space capsule, a time machine and this ‘Suit for Steven Hawking’. His sculptures are made primarily of wood with a little foam, rope and burlap thrown in here and there. Of his work, Mike says, “My goal is to create the idea of an object that remains a dream. The objects I create are based on fictions, rather than realities.”


Mark, the proud owner of this math tattoo, wrote to Carl Zimmer’s Science Tattoo Emporium, “This tattoo is the Zermelo-Fraenkel with Choice axioms of set theory. These nine axioms are the basis for ZFC set theory, which is the most commonly studied form of set theory and the most well known set of axioms as well. From these nine axioms, one can derive all of mathematics. These provide the foundation of mathematics, a field that you can likely tell that I love dearly.”


German artist Aram Bartholl created this 3-D Google Maps marker of wood, fabric and paper and made it into an art installation. Bartholl said of the project, “The project “Map” questions the red markers of the location based search engine Google Maps. The size of the rebuilt red Marker in reality corresponds to the size of a marker in the web interface in max zoom factor of the map.”


Pixiles are interactive digital sculptures that turn static objects into an ‘interactive illusion’. Virtual scenes are projected onto spheres on a mobile, which then move and seem to interact with each other and their environment. They respond to touch, body movements, sound and even wind blowing. The resulting holographic illusion makes it seem as though the objects are reacting to gravity and friction.


This is an example of ‘DNA Art’, a visualization of an individual’s DNA on canvas. Customers have their DNA swabbed and it’s then analyzed in a laboratory, and made visible through a special process involving special coloring matter and ultraviolet light. A special camera is then used to take a high-resolution photograph. DNA Art UK, which created the picture above, claims to use the .10% of DNA that makes each person unique to create their DNA art.


A graffiti artist who calls himself ‘Invader’ has been plastering tiles in the shape of characters from first-generation arcade games all over the walls of cities around the world. Invader is, as you can see, especially fond of the classic ‘Pacman’ game. Invader has put up his creations in 35 cities around the world.


The Graffiti Research Lab (GRL), kings of the light graffiti movement and unquestionably geeky graffiti artists, used a high powered projector, computer parts and a camera to ‘write’ on the side of a building with a ‘mega laser’, which has a beam that can reach 5 miles away, for their ‘L.A.S.E.R.’ project.
[Via weburbanist]

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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