Simon Troger (1683-1768). Ivory and fruit wood. Statue with shoulder bag. Height 20cm. Condition B. Mounted to circular pedestal
Bobs...#80
Charels Ray "Family Romance"
Bobs...#79
Helmut Smits's Drum Kit from food cans
Bobs...#78
Franz Xaver Messerschmidt
Bobs...#77
Taizo Yamamoto Shopping Carts
Bobs...#76
Laurie Simmons
Bobs...#75
Augustina Woodgate
Bobs #..74
Brian Jungen
Bobs...#73
Arlene Shechet
Bobs...#72
Tauba Auerbach
Bobs...#71
Angela Fraleigh
Bobs...#70
Ronson 1936 Art deco cigerette lighter
Bobs...#69
Anthony Gormley
Bobs... # 68
Sam Kaprielov
Bobs...#67
Portia Munson
Bobs...#66
Carl D'Alvia
Bobs...#65
Wim Delvoye
Bobs...#64
Adrian Ghenie
Bobs#...63
Check out Olaf Breuning's drawings, sand sculpture and lots more
Bobs...#62
Alison Moffett
Bobs...#61
Nick Horrigan
Bobs...#60
Kate MccGwire
Bobs...#59
Rose Blake (up and coming!)
Bobs...#58
Lindsay Caldicott (My sis!)
Bob...#57
Marc Quinn IRIS
Bobs...#56
The amazing Mr Joe Fig
Bobs...#55
Saiman Chow (detail)
Bobs...#54
Phrenology (from Greek "mind"/ "knowledge") is a theory stating that the personality traits of a person can be derived from the shape of the skull
Bobs...# 53
Loren Schwerd - Hair sculpture
Bobs...#52
Allison Schulnik
Bobs...#51
michael t rea
Bobs...#50
Recycled Cardboard Sculpture by Chris Gilmour
Bobs...#49
Rachel Mason
Bobs...#48
Tribal Decoration from Africa by Hans Silvester
Bobs...#47
Tony Oursler
Bobs...#46
Liza Lou
Bobs...#45
Scott Fife
Bobs...#44
Mickalene Thomas
Bobs...#43
Trent Whitehead masks from Australia
Bobs...#42
Vincent Fecteau's abstract sculpture uses an unconventionally childish medium - papier-mâché. Currently on exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, Fecteau's untitled, small-scale pieces, if a little ambiguous, manage to combine contrasting elements without seeming overly ironic.
Bobs...#41
Christoph Niemann
Bobs...#40
Lara Tomlin (Pub Show)
Bobs...#39
Zina Saunders (Pub Show)
Bobs...#38
Victoria Roberts (Pub Show)
Bobs...#37
Jennifer Daniel (Pub Show)
Bobs...#36
Charles Long (video)
Bobs...#35
Aardman on Esquire cover // Thanks Mag.culture.com
Anthony Gormley Asian Field was produced by 347 inhabitants of the Chinese city of Xiangshan, aged between 7 and 70 years. Their brief was to produce clay figures that were palm-sized, could stand upright, and have two holes for eyes. Gormley had planned to include 100,000 figures, but total ended up being 192,000, made over a five day period.
Bobs... #23
Long Bin Chen, Manhattan phone book sculpture
Bobs ...#22
Laylah Ali
Bobs ...#21
Levi van Veluw
Bobs...#20
Ron Mueck
Bobs... #19
Stephan Balkenhol
Bobs... #18
Olaf Breuning
Bobs...#17
Robert Gober
Bobs... #16
Petah Coyne
Bobs... #15
Sally Mckay
Bobs... #14
Heather Rasmussen
Bobs... #13
Saint Clair Cemin
Bobs...#12
Katharina Fritsch
Bobs... #11
Anne Chu
Bobs... #10
SILKE OTTO-KNAPP watercolour on canvas
bobs... #9
Urs Fischer "Bread House"
Bobs... #8
Richard Caldicott
Bobs... #7
Maurizio Cattelan
Bobs... #6
Gabriel Orozco. Yielding Stone (1992), a large plasticine ball that the artist has rolled through city streets picking up dust and debris, is the same weight as the artist.