CRAZY FOOD TRICKS I adore these yummy snacks so much, I can’t stop drooling! I’ll show you how to bake salmon and cheese baguette. I don’t know about you guys but for me breakfast is everything! Not only I try to make my breakfasts nutricious and yummy but I also try to make them look good. Because stylish and fun breakfast sets great mood for the working day. So here’s the hack. I guess everybody has some eggs and sausages in the fridge pretty much all the time. You’ll need 4 and a half sausages. First of all, cut every sausage in halves. Then cut every half in half again. And join two parts together with a toothpick. Now put these sausages in the form of a star on the frying pan and break three eggs inside of the star. When your starry eggs are ready take out the toothpicks and add some tomatoes and greens to your liking! Bon appetite! TIMESTAMPS: 1:58 Dried herbs and oil —————————————————————————————- Facebook: https://ift.tt/2e4YZ7w Subscribe to 5-Minute MAGIC: http://bit.ly/2ldditZ The Bright Side of Youtube: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz —————————————————————————————- Powered by WPeMatico The post 27 CRAZY FOOD TRICKS THAT ARE SO CLEVER appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2OsnvTw
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USEFUL GLUE GUN HACKS Check out these awesome glue gun hacks that are actually insanely helpful! First of all I’ll show you how to make cool flyswatter. You can also make awesome threads holder. Simply take a cup, apply some petroleum jelly and then apply glue gun. You can make your own pair of flip flops, just take your real slippers to make a contour. You can easily fix your broken glasses using glue gun and make super cool high heels cap to run on the grass like a rabbit! Wrap your smartphone with cellophane and easily make phone case, baseball cap, plate coaster, cleaning board, make non-slippery shoes soles, massage bar, flashlight diffuser, waterproof lighter and tons of other different useful items for your household! These glue gun items can be useful indoors at home and outdoors. Only sky is the limit to your imagination! TIMESTAMPS: 1:58 Non-slippery flip flops —————————————————————————————- Facebook: https://ift.tt/2e4YZ7w Subscribe to 5-Minute MAGIC: http://bit.ly/2ldditZ The Bright Side of Youtube: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz —————————————————————————————- Powered by WPeMatico The post 30 USEFUL GLUE GUN HACKS AND CRAFTS appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2P3xFr6 FAMILY FUN Here are some great ideas You’ll need: Fold one end of the TP roll inside, creating a semi-closed end. How to Make Butter Slime 1. Pour 8 ounces of your white glue in a bowl. I hope you love this butter slime recipe as much as I do! You can also substitute the clay and add some cornstarch in for a similar consistency. We would recommend about 2-4 tablespoons of cornstarch. TIMESTAMPS: 3:26 Cheese candles —————————————————————————————- Facebook: https://ift.tt/2e4YZ7w Subscribe to 5-Minute MAGIC: http://bit.ly/2ldditZ The Bright Side of Youtube: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz —————————————————————————————- Powered by WPeMatico The post 27 SIMPLE DIYs FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2OsntLo Most Amazing Art Videos 2018 Awesome Calligraphy Lettering Watercolor! Oddly Satisfying video9/29/2018 #art #artvideo #amazing #watercolor #satisfafying #drawing #howtodraw #calligraphy #lettering #painting #modernworld ♪ Music: EMAIL: [email protected] ► I really hope you enjoy it and don’t forget to subscribe to this channel for the latest videos – DISCLAIMER – I do not own the anime, music, artwork or the lyrics. All rights reserved to their respective owners!!! This video is not meant to infringe any of the copyrights. This is for promote. – Copyright Disclaimer – Powered by WPeMatico The post Most Amazing Art Videos 2018 ? Awesome Calligraphy Lettering Watercolor! Oddly Satisfying video appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2P3xDiY CHATFIELD – The Chatfield Center for the Arts will unveil its new art studio to the community on Saturday. During the summer, the United Methodist youth group tore down old cabinets, repaired walls and painted murals to make the space ready to host art classes. Jenni Petersen-Brant, the CCA marketing director, said Saturday’s public event will help make the new space and its function familiar. “This is an opportunity to share the space, filled with energy and creative potential,” she said. “We want people to get involved and know what it feels like inside. I’m excited about all the possibilities for connections.” Held in conjunction with Arts & Heritage Day, the event will give the public the chance to work on two projects: glazing ceramics for the studio’s backsplash and painting collages for peace poles. “We’re imaging what the space can inspire and getting people to think about what creativity, making and that thoughtful process can all mean for the facility and community.” Powered by WPeMatico The post Chatfield Art Center hosts art center grand unveiling Saturday appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2P058Cr On Wednesday, however, at the opening of the Vienna Contemporary fair, Mr. Janda quickly sold two small lyrical mixed-media works by the admired Croatian artist Mladen Stilinovic, who died in 2016. Priced at €12,000 each, they were bought by a Swiss collector. Now in its fourth edition in the spectacular venue of Marx Halle, a cast-iron former meat market, Vienna Contemporary, which ends on Sunday, this year featured some 110 exhibiting dealers, about 40 percent of whom are based in Austria. Unlike at next week’s much bigger Frieze London fair, no American galleries feature on the exhibitor list. For some visitors, the regional nature of the event is a compelling plus. “It’s a local fair. That’s why I like it,” said John Austin, co-founder of Austin Desmond, a gallery specializing in 20th-century art, based in London. “You see things you’d never see at international fairs. You make discoveries, particularly from Eastern Europe.” Mr. Austin, like several other visitors at the opening, was attracted to the booth of A.C.B. Gallery, based in Budapest. A.C.B. was showing Bauhaus-influenced enamel abstracts from the 1960s and ’70s by Ferenc Lantos and Sandor Pinczehelyi, Hungarian artists associated with the neo-avant-garde “Pecs Workshop” group. These were priced at between €12,000 and €30,000, but as yet unsold, according to Rona Kopeczky, the gallery’s co-artistic director. Last year, Vienna Contemporary attracted about 29,000 visitors. The liberal-leaning art world, or at least a section of it, will always show up to a well-organized fair in a destination city such as Vienna, as it will to openings of serious exhibition shows and prestigious festivals, such as Steirischer Herbst. The challenge these events face is to get the rest of the world to show up. Or even the rest of Austria. Powered by WPeMatico The post In Austria’s Art Scene, the Ideas Are Big (but the Turnout Isn’t) appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2NSr4TC Great ideas from other cities that we’d love to see here Public art is surging in Sacramento, but some of our greatest potential canvases are hidden right below our feet.By Rob Turner From left: Stairs designed to look like books in Greenville, South Carolina; a temporary portrait of Salvador Dalí at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; and koi fish adorning steps in Seoul, South Korea Books photo courtesy of John McDermott, Dali by Rachel Leigh, Koy by Julie Jackson The Idea Type #stairart into Instagram and you’ll find hundreds of eye-catching examples of vertical masterpieces. You’ll see a giant portrait of artist Salvador Dalí gracing the “Rocky Steps” in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, beautiful koi fish swimming “upstream” in Seoul, and a colorful “stack” of books in Greenville, South Carolina. These are just a handful of examples of stunning art found in the unlikeliest of places— underfoot on stairways everywhere. It’s true that our region doesn’t offer much in the way of natural elevation (Sacramento is “very flat, flatter than most people can imagine,” Joan Didion told The Paris Review), but there are more than enough stairs around to help elevate our art scene with clever works that double as three-dimensional delights. Imagine a stack of books—perhaps the works of Ms. Didion—at one of our libraries (those pictured above were vinyl decals that lasted a few months to promote book donations) or images of great artists—Wayne Thiebaud, for starters—covering the steps of the Crocker Art Museum. River Walk Park in West Sacramento, facing Old Sacramento across the river, also has dozens of steps begging for a painter’s brush. The Players The Bottom Line Powered by WPeMatico The post Elevating Art appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2P5sg2o The President’s hand size becomes a full blown social meme obscuring the true downsizing of government and the infantilizing of appointed and elected officials. Tiny hands evoke at once the diminishment of the presidential office and the powerlessness of a disenfranchised electorate. On my college campus only 11% of students voted in the last election. We need to work to make tiny hands into many hands. Powered by WPeMatico The post Tiny Hands appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2NQoqxT Bay Area artist Colter Jacobsen’s first New York City gallery exhibition, Essays, at Callicoon Fine Arts, is a beguiling onion of a show, with layer upon layer of intricacy lurking beneath its scratchy surfaces. The exhibition is comprised of a medley of modest photographs, drawings, and paintings, all incorporating found or repurposed materials. The varied media and contents can suggest that, as in a collection of literary essays, each individual artwork has its own discrete concerns. But, as with any single-authored essay collection, the more time you spend with the work, the more you understand the often subconscious set of concerns shared by even the most disparate-seeming pieces. Essays is animated by a poetic sensibility. It is critical commonplace to speak of artist’s artists, writer’s writers, painter’s painters, poet’s poets, and the like, as a way to describe figures whose work has unique appeal for members of their own creative tribe. While there’s no comparable expressions for creative work that has unique appeal for practitioners of other art forms, Jacobsen is a poet’s artist if ever one existed. It’s not just that his work occasionally alludes to poets such as Joe Brainard and Bill Berkson, or that he’s an avid reader of poetry and friendly with Bay Area poets, but that his artistic methods, thought processes, aesthetic, and values accord with those of many poets and their work. One way that Jacobsen’s poetic sensibility manifests is through visual and conceptual association, both within individual artworks and across works in the show. “Calendar (X)” (2018) and “threes (calendar)” (2018) do not visually read as calendars but are all the more poetically delightful for it. In “lemon window” (2018), scattered ovals of warm yellow echo the two smudgy yellow price tags hung below the painting, while in “Penumbra (Wild Pacific Iris)” (2018), a beige crescent of negative space echoes three pieces of crescent jewelry hung below the drawing. Correspondences abound across works as well: “Penumbra”’s maze-like nest of ink has visual analogues in the intricate pencil-work throughout the show; and the many unpainted sections of “lemon window” recall the gaps, holes, and other visual reminders of loss, decay, and absence that permeate the show. These visual echoes achieve their most pointed expression in several doubled images. “Trevi Fountain 1 (hippocampus)” (2018) and “Trevi Fountain 2 (hippocampus)” (2018) each consist of two near-identical graphite drawings placed side-by-side. One is drawn as a copy of a found image; the other as a reversed image, from memory of the first drawing. For both Portrait “Repair (Walgreens)” (2008) and “Sunset Repair (Walgreens)” (2008), Jacobsen subjected a tattered and faded found photograph to Walgreens’ one-hour photo restoration service and then placed the original alongside its tidied-up reproduction. The comparison calls attention to the polished elisions that result from the restoration process; looking at the two photographs side by side feels like looking at before-and-after images of a gentrified city street. Jacobsen achieves such effects in part through his use of self-imposed artistic procedures and constraints. For instance, he composed several drawings within a one-hour time limit. Another drawing — “kiss” (2018), inspired by biologist David George Haskell — attempts to render a square foot of ground in Ukiah, California as closely and carefully as possible. All of the works in the exhibition consist almost entirely of found or reused materials, including the smudged and faded papers (some of which are over half a century old) on which the artist draws and paints. Jacobsen’s methods and procedures draw on the repertoire and mood not only of artistic forebears, such as the Situationist International, but also of poetic forebears, such as the French Oulipo group. The Oulipo, which has functioned for over 50 years as a sort of literary research and development department, constitutes a notable influence here. Much of Jacobsen’s work, such as his doubled images, has the feel of a psychological experiment whose rules are designed to test for specific perceptual phenomena. As with Oulipo’s lab-like literary experiments, Jacobsen tends to emphasize process for its own exploratory sake. The resultant works — small and subtle — feel almost incidental, byproducts of the artist’s investigations in being and doing rather than burnished masterpieces. If this emphasis can sometimes make the completed works feel slight, it also lends them a fragile beauty, similar to the beauty of a dandelion seed head in the moment before a gust of wind or a child’s breath disperses its seeds. This sense of fragility achieves ravishing articulation in the sound recording, “Nature Boy (L’s of Hollywood Sign),” which gallery-goers can listen to on portable headphones. For the piece, Jacobsen instructed Callicoon’s director and flute player, Photi Giovanis, to play “Nature Boy” — written by Eden Ahbez and popularized by Nat King Cole — for the tree outside the gallery’s front window. Jacobsen then took Giovanis’s flute recording, slowed it down “to a speed that the tree might perceive,” and layered in sounds of hikers walking past the L’s of the “Hollywood” sign in Los Angeles, where Ahbez was discovered living in a tent when Cole’s version of the song became popular in 1948. The experiment’s conceit is of a piece with recent anthropological and artistic attempts to understand how trees and other flora communicate, from Eduardo Kohn’s 2013 book How Forests Think to Mileece’s music made with plants, Katie Holten’s 2009 installation Tree Museum, and E.J. McAdams’ 2015 installation Trees Are Alphabets. For all its conceptual and methodological complexity, “Nature Boy (L’s of Hollywood Sign)” is simply gorgeous to experience: languorous, meditative, and enveloping, the perfect soundtrack to accompany Essays. Its elongated flute notes make apparent that time’s passage is not just the subject matter of much of Jacobsen’s visual work but also its material substance. From the crushed and flattened cigarette boxes of Fags for Joe & Bill (2018) to the faint graphite timelines — for example, “10:13/ 10:19/ 6/ 10:23/ 10:26/ 3” — of the one-hour drawings, his procedural experiments, and their resultant artworks, render the passage of time more tangible. Perhaps because it is so attuned to the contours of the here and now, Jacobsen’s work remains refreshingly unconcerned with making claims for its own art historical importance. The artist’s attention to process and materials, along with his poetic commitment to the diminutive and the subtle, make questions of cultural positioning feel almost beside the point. Intimate without being overtly personal, ambitious without being striving, Jacobsen’s work makes small but convincing claims for the outsized power of modesty. Colter Jacobsen’s Essays is on view at Callicoon Fine Arts through October 14. Powered by WPeMatico The post Drawing the Essay appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2OTLZlI HEALTHY AND SHINY HAIR Here are some tips on how to make your hair smooth and shiny. BEFORE WASHING: In this video you’ll find tons of incredibly beautiful ideas for your hair! Hollywood wave, lazy curls, afro, different types of braids, ponytails, buns, you name it! Stay tuned and don’t miss out on anything! You’ll also learn how to make a spray to straighten your hair when you’re in a rush, curl your hair with a hair straightener. Also check out awfully easy and stylish lazy hairstyle ideas for every day, suitable for all hair lengths and colors! Make a super cute scrunchie with a hot glue gun, learn how to make a spray to straighten your hair when you’re in a rush, curl your hair with a hair straightener. Also check out awfully easy and stylish lazy hairstyle ideas for every day, suitable for all hair lengths and colors! When you’re suffering from static electricity in your hair, just spray some hairspray on a toothbrush and then brush your hair with it. TIMESTAMPS: 1:05 HOW TO COMB YOUR HAIR PROPERLY —————————————————————————————- Facebook: https://ift.tt/2e4YZ7w Subscribe to 5-Minute MAGIC: http://bit.ly/2ldditZ The Bright Side of Youtube: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz —————————————————————————————- Powered by WPeMatico The post 25 QUICK WAYS TO GET HEALTHY AND SHINY HAIR appeared first on OriginalArt. via OriginalArt https://ift.tt/2R9QNVQ |
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