
Ahmet Ögüt. Pleasure Places of All Kinds, Zurich, 2017.
1.75 scale model, acrylic, sand, soil. polystyrene + wood

Ahmet Ögüt. Pleasure Places of All Kinds, Zurich, 2017.
1.75 scale model, acrylic, sand, soil. polystyrene + wood

The Cascading Universe, Garden of Cosmic Speculation, Dumfries, Scotland, Charles Jencks, 1988.

It’s a diplocaulus–but since that amphibian has been extinct for millions of years, it’s actually a hyperrealistic sculpture by Goro Furuta (source)!
The Plexiglass House by Aganetha Dyck
in 2008. Commissioned by the North Dakota Museum of Art. Artist
Aganetha Dyck is a Canadian artist who collaborates with bees to create
sculptures wrapped in honeycomb.
Photo credit: Peter Dyck.
Pipe Organs by WAPSculpture.

Body Bakery: Bread imitating Gore by Kittiwat Unarrom
This brings weird to a whole new level. Thai Fine Art student and artist Kittiwat Unarrom is the son of a baker. All that baking exposure growing up has been a clear influence, but his artistic need to see things a little differently definitely flared up as he created the tacitly named “Body Bakery” – brutally, gruesomely, almost unbelievably realistic looking sculptures of dismembered human body parts sculpted entirely from bread.
With a master in Fine Arts Kittiwat Unarrom creates sculpture in bread. Not just normal sculpture but horror, dark art, gore, something I don’t know if I could actually eat. Located in Ratchaburi, Thailand, Kittiwat creates feet, hands, heads, and internal organs among other body parts all entirely edible and for sale at his family’s bakery. He skillfully paints each piece to look terrifying to the observer/customer.
Terrifying Sculptures by Mark Jenkins
Imagine walking around the corner and seeing one of these. American artist Mark Jenkins is fond of installing sculptures in public that hurtle you screaming into the uncanny valley.