- July 10, 2009 • 3:36 pm PDT
- + responses
1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
Give Komen the Pink Slip: Five Ways to Support Women's Health for All
3
Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
4
What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
5
A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork

A 10-minute video seamlessly weaves found footage of camera drops-and turns it into compelling art.

The artist Michael Neff uses chalk to trace the shadows cast by the artificially illuminated city, and photographs the fleeting results.
The stark reality of this moment in time is that many people are losing their jobs, their homes, and their ways of life. Yet amid what can seem...
The Shadow Machine, Jason Eppink's contribution to the Underbelly Project, animates photos of blacksmiths from the late-1800s.

World renowned artists are heading to South Los Angeles to collaborate with students and visually give voice to social and political issues.
Public art and public transportation combined? What more could you ask for? Art on Track is a young annual event in Chicago (it started in...
Coralie Volegaar thinks our "copy-paste culture" recycles a few good ideas ad nauseam.

Want to sail the seas of plastic pollution with 5 Gyres? Turn litter into art and enter this contest.

Check out photographer Carl Kleiner's latest project with Ikea: nine whimsical videos that should inspire a little cooking. And maybe some dancing.
For our L.A.-based readers, we'd like to clue you in to a little something happening in the art scene in your city. Usually overshadowed by New...
Some artists have made a giant pink rabbit and put it in the Alps. It's supposed to make you feel like Gulliver. In the part where everything else...
If you're worried about getting a tattoo, try getting one with some sunscreen. It'll go away. The skin cancer might not.
Our pictures are back! Enjoy the view..
Megan Murphy is making art available for the masses.
RxArt commissions prominent artists to decorate hospitals.
Lauri Firstenberg is putting Los Angeles's public art in the spotlight.
The Re:Construction project in New York lets artists use building sites as their canvas.
Two New York designers are providing artists with a way to get life's necessities by simply painting them.
Jonathon Keats makes art that makes you think. How much is that worth?
Not new news-just an enthusiastic recommendation of a long-time favorite that will maybe help you pass time at work as the week pulls to a close:...
Tim Noble and Sue Webster use carefully arranged piles of junk and other scrap materials to create incredibly lifelike shadow scenes of people, animals, and other familiar non-junk things. It's impressive, inventive stuff. There's a series of images