These contemporary or postmodern artists have developed a technique to demonstrate their creativity through working something out of immaterial pieces of metal scraps or, to put it bluntly, junk – and cast awe-inspiring shadows by combining art and illusion – darkness and light.
The Work of Larry Kagan - Is a sculptor who uses steel, light and cast shadow as a creative medium.


Fred Eerdekens. Entering the artistic space of Fred Eerdekens places the spectator in a semantic landscape in which what one had thought of as stable meanings are continually twisted and turned. What better way to figurize this than by letting the spectators themselves 'twist and turn' in trying to make sense of the objects.


Ellis Gallagher produces shadow art at night. In Brooklyn, he heads out on foot or on his bike with a backpack full of chalk, looking for shadows. He has traced everything from bicycles to whole city blocks.


Artist Kumi Yamashita. The Japanese artist creates stunning visual effects with lighting and simple forms, like letters of the alphabet, children's blocks and shoeprints. Yamashita finds the rare balance between beauty and brains.


By Tim Noble and Sue Webster. Some of their notable pieces are made from piles of rubbish collected from London streets. A light is projected against the pile, and the shadow on the wall creates an entirely different image

Remarkable And Beautiful Shadow Art
8:57 AM | art, crative, illusion, light, pictures, sculptures, shadow, shadows | 3 comments »
This horse actually dances! Check it out for yourself! This is Andreas Helgstrand at the WEG2006 Freestyle Dressage Final performance.
Beautiful Infrared Images
5:17 AM | beautiful, camera, images, infrared, photography, photos, pictures | 1 comments »
In infrared photography, the film or image sensor used is sensitive to infrared light. The part of the spectrum used is referred to as near-infrared to distinguish it from far-infrared, which is the domain of thermal imaging. Usually an "infrared filter" is used; this lets infrared (IR) light pass through to the camera, but blocks all or most of the visible light spectrum (the filter thus looks black or deep red). The effect is mainly caused by foliage (such as tree leaves and grass) strongly reflecting in the same way visible light is reflected from snow. - wikipedia.
To start with infrared photography, all you need to have is
- A digital camera that is sensitive to infrared light.
- A visible-light blocking filter (e.g. a Wratten 89B filter)
- Image-editing software, such as Photoshop.
Licht

Dave Deluria

Daniella T.

18mm

Steve Castle

Roie Galitz

Cavagna Ottavio

Corrado Borean

Orange Bread

Jernej Verbovsek


