Reconstruction Wall Art
44 creative works found
-
A lego reconstruction of the famous 1932 photograph taken by Charles Ebbets.
-
Lego recreation of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s 1932 photograph “Behind the Gare Saint Lazare”
-
A Lego Starwars themed take on Marc Riboud’s famous 1967 photograph taken at an anti-Vietnam protest in Washington
-
A lego reconstruction of Robert Capa’s 1936 picture “Death of a Loyalist Soldier”
-
Diptych / Oil on 5×7” canvas boards / 2007 / Original artwork NFS
-
Zinc plates Bit of collage added to the foreground – articles about 9/11
-
Another plunge into the concrete realities of the mind, a universal experience of the singularity of mental life. / Awareness creates life and not the other way around... but who created the awareness? / Never Mind. / ... / All art, writings and other text and materials by Vasile Stan presented here are © Copyright 2007, 2008 Vasile Stan. All Rights Reserved
-
Lego reconstruction of Henri Cartier Bresson’s 1933 photograph ‘Madrid’.
-
My good friend Belinda does some amazing artwork where she deconstructs old books and reconstructs the elements into all kinds of beautiful and fascinating designs and objects. Last week was her wedding and we were treated to a special “exhibition” of new work, hung from the church rafters all the way down the aisle. / Deconstruction of Literature: Folded / Deconstruction of Literature: Torn
-
Lego recreation of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s 1938 photograph “By the Marne River”
-
© Loredana Crupi 2007 / See more works BLACK & WHITE CHINA SERIES NATURE ABSTRACT
-
Stari Most, Serbo-Croatian for ‘Old Bridge’, built by the Ottomans out of local quarried stone and finished in 1566, surviving all manner of conflict in the region until destroyed by Bosnian Croatian artillery on 9th November 1993. The unique single span bridge over the Neretva River so worried the Turkish architect who designed and constructed it, that he made plans for his execution and estate before the supporting scaffold was taken away before it opened. To his relief the bridge did not immediately fall into the river below. Dame Rebecca West in her travelogue through Yugoslavia before WWII wrote that the bridge was “one of the most beautiful bridges in the world – to look on it is good, to stand on it is good”. For centuries the bridge was a link, between the mainly Catholic west bank and the mainly Muslim east and symbolised the multi-ethnicity enjoyed by Bosnia-Hercegovina mostly due to its geographical position on the cusp of eastern europe, western europe and Asia, between Catholicism, Orthodox and Muslim faiths. The bridge became well-known for the practice of local boys proving their manhood by diving into the blue water below, and it is a frighteningly long drop. The initial stages of the war in 1991 hardly effected Mostar, deep in the south-west of Bosnia and without a significant Bosnian Serb population, with the Bosnian Croat – Muslim alliance holding. But as the Serbs made territorial gains into Central Bosnia in 1992, the Bosnian Croats, under control of Zagreb and localised HDZ government, broke the alliance and engaged ona similar land-grab as the Serb forces. This was a catastrophe for the Muslims and multi-ethnic forces defending Sarajevo and Central Bosnia. However it meant an overnight civil war began in Mostar, one between postmen and farmers, a dirty war where conditions underground in makeshift hospitals resembled those of field hospitals in the 18th century. UN observers recorded around 1000 shells a day into the Muslim east of the town. A sustained attack finally broke the back of the bridge, held together by rope, canvas and supports at the stage, and it fell into the river. Much of the original stone has been recovered and re-used in the new Old Bridge. The reconstruction was long believed to be a necessary step towards integration of the people in the aftermath of the war. Such changes have been minimal but this is still an early stage and memories are still bitter. It has certainly helped bring the tourists back to Mostar which remains a beautiful town. The opening ceremony was a very moving and colourful event, full of hopeful speeches and promise whuich will mean little until local people start to move across the bridge again and away from the ethnic ghettoes they were forced into 15 years ago.
-
My good friend Belinda does some amazing artwork where she deconstructs old books and reconstructs the elements into all kinds of beautiful and fascinating designs and objects. Last week was her wedding and we were treated to a special “exhibition” of new work, hung from the church rafters all the way down the aisle. / Deconstruction of Literature: Folded / Deconstruction of Literature: Torn
-
Models: Stephen D., Sophia L., Kelly K.. Kai-Marie W., Matthew F., Malen and Me. I wanted to try once again to morph people together just like in Frankenstein to see how my skills have evolved in the 7-8 years since i did that. Well here’s my result. / / Any reconstructive criticism is very welcome
-
Corrugated Tunnel under a building which is being restored. Taken in Valencia.
-
Taken in Invermere BC. Buy me a shiny new machine that runs on lies and gasoline / And all those batteries we stole from smoke alarms / And disassembles my despair / It never took me anywhere / It never once bought me a drink / -The Weakerthans
-
I visited Greensburg today, it was the first time that I have been back since last May when the town was destroyed by an EF-5 tornado. I took many of the same shots that I took a year ago, including this angle of the Boy Scout House, which I was a bit surprised to see that it was still standing since most of the heavily damaged buildings have been demolished for reconstruction. I suspect since this structure survived with all 4 outer walls in-tact that it is going to be re-built with the original walls. I just can’t imagine what Greensburg’s residents have dealt with and have been through for the past year. It’s going to take years, if not decades for this town to recover and I know that there has been so many disasters in the world (they almost seem back-to-back) and people are fatigued of giving, but please do not stop your support for Greensburg, call the area’s charities and ask them what you can do to help – never stop helping.
-
Civil war reenactment scene
-
Confederate and Union graves in the Old Union Cemetery White County Tennessee. Boys from White and Van Buren counties fought bitterly on both sides in the American Civil War. They now rest side by side marked by their flags on Decoration Day 2008. / What bitter harvest indeed.
-
Folks laughed when chainsaw magnate Robert McCulloch announced he was bringing the 140-year old London Bridge to Lake Havasu City in the Arizona desert. Nobody laughs anymore. Nowadays, the London Bridge is one of Arizona’s biggest attractions. Framed Print, Medium /
-
I bought this shirt at my work with my discount… and even tho it was in my size, it was still too baggy, so i decided to modify it.. wasnt sure how i wanted to cut i t up. so first i lopped off the neckline and the sleeves.. then cut down the sleeves to make it a straight line. sliced the sides of the shirt and tied em up. it sais “dead men tell no tales”
-
The Custom House is often considered architecturally the most important building in Dublin and is sited on the river front with Beresford Place to the rear. The Custom House was the first major public building built in Dublin as an isolated structure with four monumental façades. The previous Custom House by Thomas Burgh and built in 1707 was sited up river at Essex Quay and was judged as unsafe just seventy years later. The site chosen for the new Custom House met with much opposition from city merchants who feared that its move down river would lessen the value of their properties while making the property owners to the east wealthier. The decision to built further down river was forced by the Rt. Hon. John Beresford (1738-1805) who was appointed Chief Commissioner from 1780 onwards and was instrumental in bringing James Gandon to Ireland. He favoured shifting the city centre eastwards from the Capel – Parliament Street axis towards a new axis on College Green with Drogheda Street and the construction of a new bridge linking the two sides. The building was built on slob land reclaimed from the estuary of the Liffey when the Wide Streets Commissioners constructed the Quays. The line of the crescent Beresford Place that surrounds the Custom House follows roughly the line of the old North Strand along the estuary before the construction of the Quays. / Started in 1781, the new Custom House was finished ten years later at a cost of over £200,000. The finished external design consisted of four façades each different but consistent and linked by corner pavilions. The exterior of the building is richly adorned with sculptures and coats-of-arms by Thomas Banks, Agnostino Carlini and Edward Smyth who carved a series of sculpted keystones symbolising the rivers of Ireland. / In the Irish Civil War of 1921-1922 the interior of the Custom House was destroyed when the building was completely engulfed by fire lit by the IRA. The fire blazed for five days, destroying a huge quantity of public records. The heat was so intense that the dome melted and the stonework was still cracking because of cooling five months later and Gandon’s interior was completely destroyed. / The building underwent serious reconstruction and the dome and drum were completely rebuilt in Ardbraccan limestone as opposed to the original Portland stone. The limestone is a much darker colour and this can be seen in the illustrations. The building was further restored by the Office of Public Works in the 1980s after it was discovered that the large cornice was in danger of collapsing from the damage caused by the fire and the rusting of the ironwork braces holding the stonework together. The fine sculptures and coats-of-arms that adorn the building were restored and a new Portland Stone cornice fitted to replace the sub standard one fitted after the fire.
-
just muckin about with my knee
-
An Edmontosaurus strolls through a field of golden flowers. This dinosaur roamed North America during the Late Cretaceous and was a highly successful species. Beautiful and graceful, the Hadrosaurs represent some of the best known of the dinosaur groups. Their remains have been found with skin and muscle intact, giving us an even better understanding of what these magnificant animals must have looked like.
RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.
You can buy their stuff
On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.
Risk Free Returns
It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.
About RedBubble
Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 163,200 items to more than 70 countries around the world.
Join In
Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.























