Floating faucet sculpture in Ypres, Belgium. The floating tap fountain is a clever illusion. It consist of a faucet mysteriously hovering above a pool or basin with an endless supply of water gushing out of it from seemingly nowhere. The faucet remains surprisingly steady despite having no visible support and where is all this water coming from.
This spectacular effect is achieved by a transparent tube in the middle of the water column that holds the tap in place and, at the same time, keeps feeding it with water pumped from below. The water goes up through the tube and exits at the top. The water column, which is usually turbulent, effectively hides the tube from view. (Source)
This sculpture, called the Wu Zei, depicts a creature that resembles both an octopus and a cuttlefish. It hangs from a 22-meter-tall ceiling. The sculpture was made by artist Huang Yong Ping.
Cleverly created pasta box designs by Moscow based artist Nikita Konkin.
Judit Czinkné Poór is a Hungarian artist and pastry chef that creates the most incredible cookie art I have seen. Working out of her studio, Mézesmanna, Judit uses icing like a paintbrush, creating incredible edibles.
Light Painting Evolved: Introducing the Pixelstick
Designed by Duncan Frazier and Steve McGuigan of Brookyln-based BitBanger Labs, the Pixelstick is a fancy new gadget for creating long-exposure light paintings. The device reads digital images created in Photoshop (or any other editor) and displays them one line at a time through an array of 198 full-color RGB LEDs. The images can be any height up to 198 pixels tall and many thousands of pixels wide creating huge possibilities for visual effects. (Source)
Lamp for Urban Movement by Olafur Eliasson
Metropolitan landscape art by Luke O’Sullivan.
As part of the Wood Furniture Japan Award (2016) in Tokyo, artist Emmanuelle Moureaux made an exhibition with 100 shades of color that lit up the entire exhibition hall.