German artist Jan Vormann uses Legos to “repair” old buildings in a project he calls Dispatchwork. You can see more of his work all over the world on his website.
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German artist Jan Vormann uses Legos to “repair” old buildings in a project he calls Dispatchwork. You can see more of his work all over the world on his website.
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I don’t care what anyone says, Mary, this time you’ve won the internets. This is lovely.
More like I don’t even know how long ago in Lego news.
But yeah, this is so neat.
LOVELY!
LOL aww thanks Fnarf. Too bad @2 disagrees, and I’ve lost the internets for the second time today. *sob*
@Mary P. Traverse: Don’t worry. You’ll win the internets someday. I can feel it. You have heart.
i’m not usually a huge fan of gorilla art — sometimes just getting away with it is the only statement the work is making — but this is stunning, playful, witty, and beautiful.
This is shudderingly great. Wow.
I hope he’s subsidized–Legos are friggin’ expensive!
This is great. I wish more artists had this much of a sense of fun.
Now I want to see a pillar of Legos put to the test in those concrete-squeezing hydraulic presses they have in college civil-engineering departments. It would probably do surprisingly well considering Legos are about 50% air, but they have all those little cylindrical elements inside. They could pit the Lego pillar against a same-sized solid pillar of the same plastic. I’d bet the Legos could handle up to twice the pressure.
Geflickt! :)))
Neat-o. Thanks.