Theo Jansen gathered with a small group of people last week to bring Animaris Suspendisse back from the dead. All 43 feet of it was standing in the exhibition hall of Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, ...
Hay varios videos en Internet que las muestran: una savagebeest caminando por el Museo Exploratorium de San Francisco, una strandbeest bike desfilando en el Solstice Parade de Santa Bárbara o, incluso ...
For over two decades, Dutch artist Theo Jansen has been designing kinetic sculptures of large, skeletal creatures that shuffle across beaches, powered solely by the wind. As Jansen has fostered a ...
How many artificial animals can you encounter on a seaside walk? More than one if you frequent the Dutch coastline where Theo Jansen's moving artworks amble along with the help of their rudimentary ...
Theo Jansen wants to make "life" and he figures the best way to do it is to start from scratch. A self-styled god, Jansen is evolving an entirely new line of animals: immense multi-legged walking ...
We know this unhinged, genius Dutch artist created these At-At-Walker-looking creatues just so he could play lion-master with his walking stick (argh, stay back unruly beasts!), but that's definitely ...
Theo Jansen in front of one of his Strandbeests, Animaris Umerus (2009), on Scheveningen Beach, the Netherlands, in 2009 Credit: Loek van der Klis/Courtesy Theo Jansen On an empty stretch of beach ...
Theo Jansen, Scheveningen beach, Netherlands, 2011. Courtesy of Theo Jansen. Photo by Loek van der Klis Animaris Umerus, Scheveningen beach, Netherlands, 2009. Courtesy of Theo Jansen. Photo by Loek ...
Rustling and creaking, Animaris Percipiere comes clattering across the sand towards me. There is no flesh on this 20ft dinosaur; it is a skeletal hump-backed presence whose menacing hiss issues from a ...
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