"Room(day)" / 部屋(昼)
It wasn’t a surprise that Burra’s field trip to go look at LEGO portraits filled up quickly. You’re going to have to see your friends’ pictures and hope it runs again soon.
LEGO has been going since forever … well … 1940’s.
In its most basic form it’s rectangular blocks that squeeze together until you want them apart again. It’s more than that! With these little blocks you can create whole worlds that at the end of the day can simply be pulled apart. There are no wrong answers here.
LEGO themselves used portraits as part of an advertisement campaign created by Geometry Global agency:
Nathan Sawaya is an artist that specializes in large scale LEGO models (he does other sculptures too).
These faces are nearly two meters tall making them very detailed (photo: Jonathan Liu, Wired)
This is Sawaya’s signature piece and is life size. This picture and more from Art of the Brick can be found at The Avant Guardian.
To quote Sawaya himself, “Dreams are built one brick at a time.”
At a recent Bricks in Time exhibit at Rheged, Penrith, built by Bright Bricks, LEGO portraits came in two extremes of a large scale roman style chap and this fun self portrait from the kids corner. Both great.
Breaking pixel rules a bit, Marco Pece combines LEGO backgrounds and Mini-figures to recreate artworks. There are more of his LEGO art on Flickr.
If you need more blog posts featuring LEGO on Retronator:
LEGO Scumm Bar from Monkey Island
Isometric pixel art LEGO heart
The LEGO Story short
Alter Lego history of Retronator
Infinite LEGO contraption
J2 by Assemblage Studio - NAT
Cape Schmidt sits at the northeasternmost corner of Siberia, a place that is by definition remote. But even by that measure, this former Soviet airbase is particularly desolate, a place so devoid of light and color that every photo Andrey Shapran made there appears to be black and white.
SEE MORE: Explore an eerie Soviet base at the edge of the world.
ThornBoy.
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