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Wednesday, March 5, 2014

World Most Amazing Street-arts (pictures)

"The Crevasse" by Edgar Müller
This celebrated German pavement artist is
known for painting over urban areas to "give
them a different look, thereby challenging the
audiences' perception," according to the
artist's website. This specific illusion required
five days, the help of five assistants and 820
square feet of ground. Photo courtesy of
Edgar Müller.
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“A Cave in London" by Edgar Müller According to Müller's website, this painted
cave illusion, which Edgar created for the
West India Quay Festival in London during
June 2009, is the first in a series called "The
Cave Project." He created a second cave-
related artwork in Germany for a competition
and a third in Slovenia for a cultural festival.
Photo courtesy of Edgar Müller .
Re: World Most Amazing Street-arts (pictures) by Alesh Keem(m): 5:21pm On Mar 05
"Waterfall" by Edgar Müller According to Metanormph.com, this 885
square foot pavement artwork is Müller's first
large sized project, which he created for the
Prairie Arts Festival in West Point, Mississippi.
Photo courtesy of Edgar Müller .
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"Mana Nalu" by John Pugh
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"Mana Nalu" by John Pugh “Mana Nalu,” translated as "Power of the
Wave," was created by mural artist John Pugh
with the help of 14 artists. It is located on
the east side of the Lani Nalu Plaza building
in Honolulu. Photo courtesy of John Pugh .
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"Siete Punto Uno" by John Pugh
According to Pugh’s website, Illusion-
Art.com, this commemorative mural is
located on a Main Street building in Los
Gatos, California—one of the communities
that suffered damage from the 1989 Loma
Prieta earthquake. Photo courtesy of John
Pugh .
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"Pinole Valley Road" by John Wehrle Completed in 2002, this 20,000-square-foot
painting—located under Interstate 80
between residential neighborhoods in Pinole,
California—required 20 days of lane closings
and 1,300 gallons of paint to complete. It
depicts scenes from the city's past and
present, including historical figures and
painted autos, according to Wehrle's website,
TroutInHand.com. Photo courtesy of John
Wehrle .
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“The Meaningful Game” by Tracy Lee Stum This 10' x 18' interactive mural—designed to
allow observers to participate in the actual
artwork by "playing chess" with the Dalai
Lama—was created for the Emerald Coast
Street Painting Festival in Panama City,
Florida. "I had come up with the concept
when discussing with a friend who I would
most like to sit down with to discuss life
issues," Stum says. Photo courtesy of Tracy
Lee Stum .
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"Big Bowl of Wontons" by Tracy Lee Stum Also meant to be an interactive painting, this
7' x 16' mural was completed in 2006 at
Langham Place Street Art Festival in Hong
Kong, and required seven hours to complete.
“Lots of viewers played with picking up the
spoon, sitting in the soup and just trying to
get a wonton out of the bowl with some
chopsticks," Stum says. Photo courtesy of
Tracy Lee Stum .
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"Desert Baby" by Tracy Lee Stum Inspired by traditional desert culture she
encountered during her travels in the Middle
East, Stum completed this 12' x 12' mural in
two days for 2008’s I Madonnari Italian
Street Painting Festival in Santa Barbara,
California. The carpet design mimics the
traditional "kilim" style popular throughout
the region, she says. Photo courtesy of Tracy
Lee Stum .
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"Ohio & Erie Canal" by Eric Grohe
This 50' x 141' mural on prepared brick
depicts the Ohio & Erie Canal in Massillon,
Ohio. According to the artist’s website,
EricGroheMurals.com, "Rather than cover the
entire wall with paint, the design of this
mural utilizes the existing brick as part of the
scene’s architectural setting." Photo courtesy
of Kathy Grohe .
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"Italian Staircase" by Ron Francis
According to the artist's website, this 9' x 13'
mural—created in Melbourne, Australia, in
1989—"was painted directly onto an external
rendered brick wall, which is viewed through
a large window from the living area." Both
the window and the wall were specially built
to accommodate the mural. Photo courtesy
of Ron Francis .
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"Cocito" by Kurt Wenner
Artist Kurt Wenner says he created this
painting for the Pasadena Chalk Festival
during the 1980s. In the “Inferno” section of
Dante’s epic poem The Divine Comedy, Cocito
is described as the ice lake at the bottom of
the ninth circle of hell. “The stones in the
photo—that the audience is standing on—are
also painted," Wenner adds. Photo courtesy
of Kurt Wenner .
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"Milagro" by Kurt Wenner This painting was created for the Cervantino
International Festival in Guanajuato, Mexico.
The name translates to "miracle," referring to
the conceptual event that took place following
the flooding of this painted silver mine: After
10 days, when the waters receded, the miners
came out alive, according to Wenner. Photo
courtesy of Kurt Wenner .
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"Office Stress" by Kurt Wenner
Wenner says this work is shown in front of a
particularly soulless office building in
Mantua, Italy, for a reason: It was one in a
series of images depicting contemporary
“hells.” Its companion pieces, Wenner
explains, are titled "Gluttony" and "The
Ghetto." Photo courtesy of Kurt Wenner .
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“Costa” by Manfred Stader
This 9' x 13' painting was created in London's
Covent Garden by Manfred Stader, who,
according to his website, combines 16th-
century Italian folk art with 21st-century
illusion painting using pastel chalk. The frog
design, according to Stader's website, was
made using chaff (a dry grain). He
documented the various stages of its creation
on his website, 3d-Street-Art.com. Photo
courtesy of Manfred Stader .
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“HDI” by Manfred Stader
Commissioned by the German insurance
company HDI, this 9' x 16' artwork was
created in Hamburg, Germany, in a parking
garage. It took four days to complete,
according to Stader. Photo courtesy of
Manfred Stader .
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Untitled by Marc Spijkerbosch
Marc Spijkerbosch has painted some 300
trompe l'oeil works for hotels and restaurants
as well as residential, commercial and civic
clients throughout the world. He painted this
particular pavement artwork, a depiction of
the underworld for the Southern Opera’s
production of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute,” in
Christchurch, New Zealand. Photo courtesy
of Marc Spijkerbosch .

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