"As long as something creates a reaction it’s alive," says Maurizio Anzeri, the Italian born artist from the city of Loano. Known for his series of eerie portraits or photo-sculptures, a term used by himself to describe his portraits.
More of Anzeri's work can be seen in this Yatzer profile:
The Kelly Writers House is a 13-room house on the University of Pennsylvania campus that serves as a center for writers of all kinds from Penn and the Philadelphia region at large.
After being beaten into a brain-damaging coma by five men outside a bar, Mark Hogancamp built a 1/6th scale World War II-era town in his backyard. Mark populated the town he dubbed "Marwencol" with dolls representing his friends and family and created life-like photographs detailing the town's many relationships and dramas. Playing in the town and photographing the action helped Mark to recover his hand-eye coordination and deal with the psychic wounds from the attack.
Here's the trailer for the documentary about Marwencol:
As I write this, the film is streamable on Kanopy, the terrific streaming service that's free to sign up to with most library cards.
Jeremy Mayer disassembles typewriters and then reassembles them into full-scale, anatomically correct human figures and other sculptures. He does not solder, weld, or glue these assemblages together — the process is entirely cold assembly.
His guiding principles:
Emulation is beautiful. Sustainability is crucial. Patience is paramount. Abundance abides.
These principles are expanded on on Mayer's website: