31 Mayıs 2013 Cuma

Kurt Wenner's eye-popping sidewalk art

kurt wenner gallery - chalk 3d sidewalk art - kurt wenner

'The Flying Carpet' by Kurt Wenner - Kids, please don't do that at home!!

Amazing Sidewalk Art Monalisa in Sydney Australia

street art paintings - creative street art

This amazing piece of art shows the iconic image of Mona Lisa originally painted by Leonardo da Vinci. This interpretation is actually sidewalk art put together by a group of artist assistants in Sydney, Australia. The image was created by using 3,604 coffee cups. Each cup was filled with different amounts of coffee and milk to create the proper pigment color that brings Mona Lisa to life. [ via : furniturefashion ]

3d art on pavements - amazing pavement art

buy paintings - monolisa artwork

28 Mayıs 2013 Salı

3D Chalk Drawings by Mr. Hou

chalk drawings - 3d ball chalk art - chalk drawing

Mr. Hou is a talented Chinese artist famous for his memorable 3D drawings. For his creative street art, internet fans have labeled him the “Chalk God”

 3-d sidewalk art - mr. hou art - sidewalk 3d chalk art

3d optical illusion chalk art - street painting illusions - pavement chalk drawings

chinese artist - chalk artwork - pavement 3d art


24 Mayıs 2013 Cuma

Lizard gallery by ulla taylor

pavement art - ulla taylor art gallery - chalk
 3d street artist ulla taylor's lizard mini gallery
pavement paintings - ullas art

sidewalk art - ulla taylor chalk artist

awesome sidewalk art - animal chalk art - ulla

Adventures of Sluggo by David Zinn

3 d paintings - david zinn - pavement street art

Meet Sluggo – a green semi-subterranean inhabitant of Ann Arbor, Michigan. This strange little creature first appeared back in 2008 on a sidewalk, and since then started peaking out of walls cracks, chilling on ledges or doing his daily routines all over the town. Turns out, it was drawn by a local graphic artist David Zinn, using simple colored chalks. Calling himself an “inveterate doodler and a shameless word nerd”, David uses art as a problem-solving tool, even if the problem is a sad-looking street crack.[ via : boredpanda]

street paint art - 3d optical illusion david - 3d chalk sidewalk art

david zinn - sidewalk drawings 3d - street art on pavement

22 Mayıs 2013 Çarşamba

Swimming-pool by julian beever

sidewalk 3d art julian beever - 3d side walk - street paintings illusions

Beever's self-proclaimed best-known drawing is his "Swimming-pool on High Street." "My art is for anybody. It's for people who wouldn't go into an art gallery. It's art for the people," explained Beever, when asked why he prefers the pavement to more traditional artistic mediums.

20 Mayıs 2013 Pazartesi

Big Bowl of Wontons by Tracy Lee Stum

3d pavement art - pavement art tracy lee

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.

Pinole Valley Road by John Wehrle

3d street art - 3d art - illusion art 3 d - painting

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.

17 Mayıs 2013 Cuma

Cong Langui | China’s Chalk Art Master

chalk art - cong langui - sidewalk chalk artist -

Cong Langui is a talented Chinese chalk artist who travels across the country creating amazing artworks that make people stop in their tracks and stare in amazement.

street chalk art - paintings
[ via : odditycentral ]

14 Mayıs 2013 Salı

3D giant snail by julian

julian pavement art - 3d pavement illusion

This photo was taken somewhere in Europe, and I can’t believe I never saw it before – specially since the author behind it is one and only Julian Beever, master of 3D pavement art. What you see below is a street and a plain stone bench occupied by an ordinary citizen and one unordinary creature. Both pavement and bench are partially covered by a chalk drawing. The drawing disappears in places, and at one point seems to bump into a metal pole. What I find so interesting about this anamorphic painting is it’s seamless transition between flat pavement surface and a bench. But I guess this all makes sense when you see it from another angle. Both photos are included!

julian giant snail art - 3d pavemen art - pavement art illusion
 [ via : moillusions ]

13 Mayıs 2013 Pazartesi

Street Art on Sarasota Chalk Festival

chalk festival art - sarasota - chalk street art

 On a Sarasota Chalk Festival. By Leon Keer, Peter Westerink, Ruben Poncia and Remko van Schaik. Design was made by: Leon Keer.

Leon Keer -  Peter Westerink - Ruben Poncia - Remko van Schaik

7 Mayıs 2013 Salı

By Leon Keer - Sarosata chlak art festival , Florida

chalk art festival - sarosata chalk art - leon keer chalk art


“The image is a metaphor for the forgotten playfulness in life, never forget to explore your creativity by keeping your inner child close.”


art chalk - sarosata florida - art chalk drawing
[ via : streetartutopia ]

6 Mayıs 2013 Pazartesi

Sidewalk chalk 3d art In Chiang Mai, Thailand

3d chalk sidewalk art - spanish artist juandres vera - street painter
Spanish artist, Juandres Vera created this piece in Chiang Mai in Thailand in March this year.
Photo by Fredo Reedoo.

sidewalk art pictures - amazing 3d sidewalk chalk art

2 Mayıs 2013 Perşembe

Coca-Cola Bottle by julian beever

julian beever art - chalk drawings - amazing chalk artist

The "Pavement Picasso," English chalk-artist Julian Beever, crouches next to one of his most-famous creations, "Coca-Cola Bottle: Is It the Real Thing?" To create his tromp l'oeil drawings, Beever uses distorted perspectives to make images seemingly 3-D, a technique called anamorphosis. "The secret is to set up a camera on a tripod and keep it in one spot and check every mark you make," said Beever. "It's really just playing with perspective to make it appear different to what it really is." (Julian Beever)