Dark Silence In Suburbia

Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Van Essie / Esther Verschoor



Her Secret Garden - skull doll


Eden - skull doll.


The Wind That Shakes The Cherry Tree - skull doll.


A Thousand Cranes - skull doll.


Edwina - skull doll.




Miss Fanny Lacroix - skull doll.


Edward - skull doll.


The Gift - skull doll.


Rising - skull doll.



Paula and Pauline - conjoined twins 2.


Hurt - skull doll.


Soleil Noir - skull doll.


Vanishing - skull doll.



Stop Now! - skull doll.


Stop Staring! - wall mount.


Headmistress Grimm - skull doll.


For My Name Was Eliza Day.



Enough! - skull doll.


Lyra - skull doll.


Losing a Friend - skull doll.


Beauty it never fades, it only changes - skull doll.



Snow White's Poisoned Apple - skull bust.


The McQueen Sisters - skull dolls.


Poison Ivy - skull doll.


Black Widow Lily and Her Little Dawn - skull dolls.



Dahlia Noir - skull doll.


Twice Yours - skull doll.


Thief of Hearts - skull doll.



Frenzy - skull doll.



Feline La Rouge - skull doll.


Fossette La Toutouque - skull doll.



Pleasure - skull doll.


Coming Ou of the Dark - skull doll.



Please Leave! -skull doll.


How i Wish You Were Here - skull doll.


Release Me! - skull doll.



The Gossip Girl - skull doll.


Where the Wild Roses Grow - skull doll.


Oh Dear...! - wallmounted skull artpiece.




Esther Verschoor (1967) is an artist from the Netherlands and she makes dolls using skulls and other materials. She only use skulls from animals that lived and died cruelty free.



Website

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Ronit Baranga


Sculpture 

Clay & Porcelain

Silver Craft






























































































Tableware or Table Appointments includes the dishes, sauce boats, glassware, and cutlery (knives, forks, spoons, chopsticks and so on) used to set a table for eating a meal. The nature, variety, and number of objects varies from culture to culture. Israeili artist Ronit Baranga (born in 1973) uses clay and porcelain to craft some really disturbing tableware that would probably instantly make you lose your appetite. Already known for his strange sculptures, Baranga applied his creativity to the kitchen, putting realistic mouths and fingers on dishes and cups.



Website

EK Interview