RUR!


More wonderful Junk Robots at Bennett Robot Works by Gordon Bennet.
Great Design leads to Great Animation!
This is how to get controversial views across.
http://www.knife-party.net/flash/barry.html
Platform has furniture that utilizes recycled wood and makes little effort to cover up the cracks and nail holes. Instead artist, Zach Hadlock uses these flaws to enhance the beauty of the furniture.
I would love to see some detail shots of the furniture and how the cabinets open up and look inside.
Platform Furniture and Fabrication is featured in the current issue of Dwell Magazine.

John Chamberlain is one of my favorite sculptors. I should give him my 1963 Ford Falcon to work on.
Represented by Waddington Galleries.

Check out the selected works of German Surrealist Painter, Neo Rauch at the David Zwirner Gallery.


Gary Panter has been proclaimed as the most influential artist to Graphic Design in the 80's. He's one of my early influences along with Jack Kirby.
He still kicks Ass!
Posted by José Cruz at 5:23 PM Labels: comix, fine artist, Gary Panter, graphic design, illustration

The works of Sue Williams prove that Women as artists should not be taken lightly. Her artwork is a combination of Walt Disney and Gary Panter with a twist of Al Goldstein. Highly suggestive and definitely provocative, she stands out with her High-Impact Pop Style.
Her works can be seen at:
Bernier/Eliades Gallery
David Zwirner Gallery
Rik Catlow's Artwork is one of the New Hip-Cool Artists which I find refreshing. Super-Talented and Graphically Bold, Rik's works are worth taking more than a glance.
Mark Ryden is showing at the Michael Kohn Gallery from March 10 thru April 28 2007. Don't miss it.

Betsy Friedman at the Adam Baumgold Gallery. Her Pop Art combines explosive colors with chaotic geometry that evokes a distinctive sensibility of style. Most Post-Pop artists come off as pure imitations but Ms. Friedman is strikingly fresh to that somewhat overcrowded and overplayed genre.
Stupid Comix from Mister Kitty.
This site is quite funny in a Stupid-Ass Way!
I am knocked over by California artist Robert Larson at
Urban Exposure and represented by the Elliott Brown Gallery.
He is giving us a statement about our society through his re-cycling of discarded familiar packaging. His quilt of thrown out drug baggies is ingeneous and yet down right scary to think about.
His found art has me looking for gold on the streets and near trash bins.
Thanx for giving us a new look at Trash/Art!