March 9, 2012
One of my favorites. From the California Academy of Sciences

One of my favorites. From the California Academy of Sciences

February 27, 2012
via fashionableanimals
Those look like snub nosed monkeys, right? I think so.
Also, Dioramas has 300 posts sitting here waiting to go up. But I’m busy, and you don’t want your dashboard spammed. So we’re taking it slow and easy for a while.

via fashionableanimals

Those look like snub nosed monkeys, right? I think so.

Also, Dioramas has 300 posts sitting here waiting to go up. But I’m busy, and you don’t want your dashboard spammed. So we’re taking it slow and easy for a while.

February 13, 2012
No info, but love it!

No info, but love it!

(Source: xannabelx)

January 10, 2012

yycstudio:

Dioramas WITH Mind Control!

These are actually digitally created/rendered. But they’re beautiful, and I love me some artistic conversations about the definitions of the real. So I’m going to call them dioramas, and hope you find them as mind blowing as I do.

December 23, 2011
The Great Wall by Guy Laramee. A beautiful landscape constructed from books, with a fascinating story. From the artist’s site:
“Having recently overthrown the American Empire in the 23rd century, the Chinese Empire set out to chronicle the history of the Great Panics during the 21st and 22nd centuries.
This Herculean undertaking resulted in a historiographical masterwork entitled, The Great Wall. Comprising 100 volumes, this encyclopaedia derives its name from The Great Wall of America, a monumental project to build an impregnable wall around the United States of America so as to protect this land from barbarian invasions. 150 years in the making, this wall ultimately isolated Americans from the rest of the world while sapping the country’s remaining cultural and natural resources. It also undermined the American people’s confidence in systematized hedonism, thus hastening the fall of the American Empire. As we now know this paved the way for China to invade American territory.
The Chinese Empire later ordered a group of scribes to write The Great Wall series. In the course of their duties they familiarized themselves with the libraries of the former USA. Through a strange twist of fate they thereby discovered the ancient sources of their own civilization which the new Middle Kingdom had long ago removed from its libraries. In the end this contact, primarily with Taoism and Chan (Zen) Buddhism, sowed the seeds of the Chinese Empire’s”

The Great Wall by Guy Laramee. A beautiful landscape constructed from books, with a fascinating story. From the artist’s site:

“Having recently overthrown the American Empire in the 23rd century, the Chinese Empire set out to chronicle the history of the Great Panics during the 21st and 22nd centuries.

This Herculean undertaking resulted in a historiographical masterwork entitled, The Great Wall. Comprising 100 volumes, this encyclopaedia derives its name from The Great Wall of America, a monumental project to build an impregnable wall around the United States of America so as to protect this land from barbarian invasions. 150 years in the making, this wall ultimately isolated Americans from the rest of the world while sapping the country’s remaining cultural and natural resources. It also undermined the American people’s confidence in systematized hedonism, thus hastening the fall of the American Empire. As we now know this paved the way for China to invade American territory.

The Chinese Empire later ordered a group of scribes to write The Great Wall series. In the course of their duties they familiarized themselves with the libraries of the former USA. Through a strange twist of fate they thereby discovered the ancient sources of their own civilization which the new Middle Kingdom had long ago removed from its libraries. In the end this contact, primarily with Taoism and Chan (Zen) Buddhism, sowed the seeds of the Chinese Empire’s”

October 26, 2011
Exurbia, by Nelly Blaya.

Exurbia, by Nelly Blaya.

(Source: cinoh)

October 18, 2011

newyorker:

James Casebere’s photographs of handmade, spare environments speak to a preoccupation with suburban architecture and domestic interiors. His habitats are entirely void of people, which only adds to their creepy charm. This fall, a new survey of his work to date is coming out. See more of Casebere’s creations here: http://ow.ly/70Qw9

October 6, 2011

fuckyeahdioramas:

tumblr user (and poet/author) SaintAdrienne thought this would be appropriate, seeing as I can now post again because of a new iMac.  I agree!  Personal Shoebox Apple Store! (via Frensleven)

Reblogging this miniature Apple Store diorama, for Steve.

October 4, 2011

sunsatskippy:

Deer and elk at the Chicago Field Museum this past winter.

(Source: skippylynn)

September 26, 2011
amnhnyc:

This velociraptor model was originally featured in the exhibition Dinosaurs: Ancient Fossils, New Discoveries in 2005. Museum curator Mark Norell recently discussed new evidence that dinosaurs, once thought to resemble scaly lizards, were in fact fluffy, colorful animals. Check out the video here. 

amnhnyc:

This velociraptor model was originally featured in the exhibition Dinosaurs: Ancient Fossils, New Discoveries in 2005. Museum curator Mark Norell recently discussed new evidence that dinosaurs, once thought to resemble scaly lizards, were in fact fluffy, colorful animals. Check out the video here

September 21, 2011
If you’ve got a window with a bad view that doesn’t get much sun, why not turn it into a diorama like this? A cute little prairie dog scene could brighten your day. From the Carnegie Mellon University Museum.

If you’ve got a window with a bad view that doesn’t get much sun, why not turn it into a diorama like this? A cute little prairie dog scene could brighten your day. From the Carnegie Mellon University Museum.

10:20am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z5J6Wy9mxrVU
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Filed under: diorama 
September 19, 2011

September 15, 2011
CHARLES MATTON “ENCLOSURES” INSTALLATION AT ALL VISUAL ARTS

2dosesaday:

  

    With NYFW here, I’m absolutely over flowing with inspiration. Visual artist Charles Matton gives us a look into these miniature spaces, which were memories from his own life. Using materials such as wood, glass, plaster, and paper Matton’s creations give us a sense of what he felt during these parts in his life. Whats even more incredible is how he scaled them down to such a size and still give off the same emotions as they did in their normal size.

Read More

(Source: allvisualarts.org, via lu--lu)

August 26, 2011
A different (and human-less) shot of the beautiful forest diorama at the biological museum in Stockholm. Beautifully painted backdrop by Bruno Liljefors.

A different (and human-less) shot of the beautiful forest diorama at the biological museum in Stockholm. Beautifully painted backdrop by Bruno Liljefors.