Abandoned places often seem like art in themselves; there’s a certain beauty in decay, and
urban explorers go to great lengths in order to capture decrepit remains on film. But some take it one step further, turning abandonments into eerie, haunting settings for wholly unexpected art that can be surprisingly vibrant and inspirational.Guerrilla Guitar String Art on Paris Bridge
(images via: paris.untappedcities.com)
Imagine clambering onto abandoned train tracks that look out over the city of Paris. One photographer, Mary-Jane Lee, did just that, and found this beautiful and surreal sight: guitar strings, attached to the rails in an X. This guerilla work of art is so unlikely, it almost looks Photoshopped.
Tape Art by BUFFdiss
(images via: buffdiss flickr)
Berlin-based tape artist BUFFdiss creeps into abandoned spaces and beautifies their walls with wholly unexpected scenes like human hands and geometric arrangements. Some of his newer artworks combine tape and paint.
Crocheted Gas Station
(images via: make zine)
An eyesore of an abandoned gas station got a colorful makeover in the form of crocheted cozies, quilt squares, blankets and other fabrics. Artist Jennifer Marsh enlisted professional and amateur artists from 15 countries as well as over 2,500 grade-school students in 29 states to cover the 50-year-old former Citgo stations with more than 3,000 panels.
Deserted House to Light Installation
(images via: luisa alvarez)
Lighting designer Luisa Alvarez transformed an abandoned house using old color-tinted photographic negatives and gels which were wrapped around chairs and other objects. Alvarez captured her temporary project, called Habitando, on film and removed it that night. The project also featured ropes of LED lights, giving warmth to a home that hasn’t seen living inhabitants for years.
Underbelly Project: Graffiti in NYC’s Hidden Subways
(images via: gothamist)
An unused subway station beneath New York City was secretly infiltrated by artists starting in 2009. The illegal Underbelly Project gave each artist, including ROA and Mark Jenkins, one full night to cover a designated space. According to the show’s curators, Workhouse and PAC, the Underbelly Project is a statement on the increasing commercialism of street art, as works by well-known artists like Banksy are often removed from their urban environments and sold at galleries. The entrance to the forgotten, abandoned subway station was closed up when the project was completed in the hopes of preserving this art from money-hungry exploiters.
Marjan Teeuwen’s Destroyed Houses
(images via: saatchionline)
From WebUrbanist: “Dutch artist Marjan Teeuwen creates eerie, unsettling spaces by reclaiming the wreckage of destroyed abandoned buildings and re-assembling it in studios or museums for aesthetic and artistic effect. She also occasionally creates these installations within the abandoned spaces themselves, at one point hacking down an entire exterior wall and bringing the pieces inside to arrange.”
Defenestration in San Francisco
(images via: foundsf.org)
At an abandoned four-story building in San Francisco, furniture is leaping for its freedom from open windows – clocks poking their heads out and looking up at the sky, chairs making a run for it down the peeling brick walls and tables pitching themselves off the roof. The project is called Defenestration, a word meaning “to throw out of a window”, and was created by 100 volunteers.
Artist Brian Goggin describes it on his website thusly: “Located at the corner of Sixth and Howard Streets in San Francisco in an abandoned four-story tenement building, the site is part of a neighborhood that historically has faced economic challenge and has often endured the stigma of skid row status. Reflecting the harsh experience of many members of the community, the furniture is also of the streets, cast-off and unappreciated.”
Artist Brian Goggin describes it on his website thusly: “Located at the corner of Sixth and Howard Streets in San Francisco in an abandoned four-story tenement building, the site is part of a neighborhood that historically has faced economic challenge and has often endured the stigma of skid row status. Reflecting the harsh experience of many members of the community, the furniture is also of the streets, cast-off and unappreciated.”
The Airport Phoenix by Xavier Juillot
(image via: the moscow news)
French artist Xavier Juillot installed inflatable chutes and other sculptural elements in a derelict airport in the SIberian town of Kansk, Russia for the 10th International Kansk Video Festival.
Reassembled Structures by Dennis Maher
(images via: assembled city fragments)
Buildings that became abandoned due to industrial collapse in the city of Buffalo, New York have morphed into sculptural installations that immortalize this decay. Buffalo-based artist Dennis Maher has taken some of the city’s all-too-common abandoned residential and industrial structures and crafted their remains into sculptures that give them a new place in the world.
Enormous Graffiti on Abandoned Buildings in Lisbon
(images via: lost at e minor)
A massive abandoned building on the streets if Lisbon, Portugal is now a beautiful public mural thanks to the ‘Crono Project’, which brought street artists from around the world in to decorate abandoned structures. These particular images were created by BLU and Gemeos.
Beaded Spiderwebs
(image via: favim)
While abandoned churches no doubt have plenty of spiderwebs without the help of an artistic visitor, you can’t deny that this beaded installation is anything but charming. Information on this particular work is hard to find – if you have info, let us know!
Abandoned Messages by Rero
(images via: urbanartcore.eu)
Rero, a conceptual artist with a graffiti background, applies minimalist typography to gritty abandoned surfaces in cities like Paris, London and Berlin. This series, ‘Image Negation’, was carried out in the latter. See more at Rero’s Flickr stream.
Detroit’s Ice House
(image via: detnews)
The decline of Detroit is a depressing sight, with abandoned houses dotting nearly every street. These houses are a visual reminder of the sorrow of economic depression, reminding everyone nearby just how bad things have gotten. But photographer Greg Holm and architect Matthew Radune believed they could change that, at least for one such house. In creating Ice House Detroit, they turned a blight into a crystalline castle, giving it a sense of magic, but also helping to raise awareness about the problem. Once winter ended and the ice began to melt, the house was demolished, its components reclaimed for other projects.
Before I Die Project
(images via: candychang)
In this transformation, a street-side abandoned building is turned from an emblem of hopelessness to a place that actually inspires hope for the community. The Before I Die Project is an installation by Candy Chang which began in New Orleans, turning a building into a massive chalkboard where community members are invited to write down their aspirations and share their dreams. The project has since spread all over the country, and Chang encourages artists in other cities to try it out for themselves.
Abandoned Lego Houses by Mike Doyle
(images via: twisted sifter)
And in a work of art that’s the exact opposite of all of those featured on this list, artist Mike Doyle creates super-creepy abandoned houses out of unlikely materials: little plastic LEGOs. The top house alone took Doyle over 600 hours to complete using standard LEGOs that have not been painted or altered in any way. No foreign materials like wood or glue were used, and the photos were not retouched.
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