Sunday, 6 November 2011

Three Pavilions





Ba_lik Pavilion
The Pavilion was built around five modular components and mounted on wheels. It allows various position depending on the function given to it.






















DIY Reykjavik Pavilion
It is a temporary installation constructed with one thousand aluminum triangles, each varying in size, shape, fold, and pattern. The reason Aluminium was choosen is that the material has a unique structural challenges and potential of recyclability in it’s structure and also to show the current use of materials in Iceland.









The living Pavilion

Inspired from wood trellis and green walls.

The living Pavilion is made out from recycled milk crates connected with heavy- duty packaging straps.


Thursday, 29 September 2011

Portrait

A charcoal portrait with an acrylic focal square on the eye. I wanted to create something new and mixing two different medias on one base.

Sanitary Pads Dress


This mock up dress is made out of sanitary pads. The concept was to create something in a material that it  is not usual to produce it in that material. The reason I use red with the action painting technique is to give that sick feeling sanitary pads are normaly used for.

Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Recycled Artistic Costume

An artistic costume that has paper megazines in the bottom part and a dyed curtian for the top. The buttons on the waist band are also recycled. Those pieces hanging from the waistband are pieces of torn T-shirts and some of them are dyed too.

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Boat ShedsIn

In an earlier post on Superuse we saw a boat being reused as a roof. Kevin Wakelam spotted these much bigger boats being reused on the island of Lindisfarne, England. Local fisherman have reused their old boats by turning them upside and creating a storage shed for their fishing equipment. The result is a stunning voluptuous building.
Boat Sheds

Bookswap booth

Awesome use of a defunct telephone box as a local communal book swap. Brüner Bücherkiste (by photojennic).
Bookswap booth

I try not to think out of the box anymore, but on its edge, its corner, its flap, and under its bar code.
— Clint Runge