So what would the dictionary look like if the definition for each word was replaced with the first image result from Google? Felix Heyes and Ben West find out in their latest project, Google.

So what would the dictionary look like if the definition for each word was replaced with the first image result from Google? Felix Heyes and Ben West find out in their latest project, Google.
Abigail Reynolds is an artist based in London and has been exhibiting her artwork around the world since Y2K, remember that mess? Anyway, Reynolds latest work is constructed from primarily from found book images to construct a new composition. I really enjoy the way she plays with color and composition as she allows her work to break free from the confines of the square or rectangle.
As 2011 ends and we begin 2012, I want to reflect on the most read post of the last year. Here is a collection of the 20 most read posts written in 2011.
Richard Pearse is a New Zealand artist who currently lives in a shed in Patea, South Taranaki and he has some wonderful wooden mosaic works.
Over the weekend, many different outlets shared views of the September 11 tragedy. Artists have also expressed their feelings over the years and Googling for artist 9/11 tributes will return thousands of works.
Bill Talsma’s most recent artwork comments on rewards we receive for insignificant or trivial things that we do. These pieces question what is truly remarkable or worthy of an award.
Wil Murray’s mixed media artwork blurs the lines between disciplines as well as genres. These pieces have an identify complex that I love.
Jennifer Anderson’s latest series, Engram, involves cutting intricate geometric patterns into discarded reproductions of paintings. My eye goes back and forth from trying to understand the old image of what has been cut away to perceiving the new negative image of the newly cut pattern.
Kim Frohsin’s newer collage work has honed in on select bits of imagery to explore and is ripe with color and texture.