Finnish musician Kimmo Pohjonen provides background music for wrestlers, and a glorious spectacle for the rest of us.
Magic
Betcha didn’t think paper could do this.
In celebration of the Fourth of July, here are a few artists who have used fireworks and explosions in their work, from drawing on walls to collaborating with research laboratories to creatively disposing of others’ artworks.
If you see nothing, say something.
You know Henri Rousseau’s paintings of lion attacks? He made those based on taxidermic displays. If you liked that, this is the book for you.
Berndnaut Smilde’s cloud installations consist of precise mixtures of machine-generated light, humidity, temperature, and smoke.
Picasso did it. Now, you can too.
The Walker Art Center’s current exhibition is like one of those television shows where a masked magician leaks the secrets of his most jaw-dropping stunts: you get the satisfaction of seeing a good trick and get to learn how it’s done.





































