Description from Etsy: It’s an Upside-down Baby Head Bowl!
(Note: Can be used as a large cup or a small bowl.)
This handmade bowl is low fire white clay with a food safe glaze, which means the bowl is made to be used. The outside has a clear glaze over white clay. The inside has an orange glaze under a red glaze. This cup stands 3 1/2″ high and has a 4″ diameter. It does make a fun conversation piece, plus it’s functional!
Lego Artist Matt Armstrong created a realistic looking Lego skull by gluing Lego pieces over a non-Lego skull model. Despite the unconventional method used, the finished product still looks pretty rad!
Here at Worleygig.com, we like skulls! In the spirit of Halloween I’ve decided to dig up various random skull posts over the next few days. To kick things off in what we will loosely refer to as “Skull Week,” check out this rad skull sculpture by artist Sudobh Gupta entitled Very Hungry God, which is crafted from ordinary kitchen objects. Very Hungry God has traveled across Europe, from Paris to Venice and currently resides at the Frieze Art Fair in Regent’s Park, London. You can read a nice background story on the artist’s motivation for the creating the sculpture Here.
Nothing says Happy Easter to me quite like this fantastic sculpture of Jesus made entirely out of milk chocolate, which was lovingly crafted by Brooklyn-based artist Cosimo Cavallaro. A lot of ignorant, narrow minded, tight-ass religious conservatives have given Cosimo a hard time about the My Sweet Lordsculpture, as it is also known. Continue reading Happy Easter and the Controversy of the Chocolate Jesus→