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Mandatory Credit: Photo by OJO Images / Rex Features ( 1294198a )
Autumn leaves on trees along road, Sawpit, Colorado, United States
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Artistic self portraits by Levi Van Veluw, Netherlands - Feb 2009
STRICTLY Editorial Use Only, No Merchandising or Advertising, no print sales, no books, posters etc. (No UK website usage unless fee is agreed - contact Toni Saint - 0207 239 8655 tsaint@rexfeatures.com for clearance)
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Levi van Veluw / Rex Features ( 855276s )
An artist with a head for art
AN ARTIST WITH A HEAD FOR ART
Here's an artist with a head for art.
Levi van Leluw creates amazing scenes using his own HEAD for a canvas.
The Dutch artist's works include everything from realistic-looking forests to covering his skull entirely in pebbles.
Other eye-catching pieces see him covering his face and shoulders in ink patterns, tree bark and hair.
Talented Levi, 23, takes about 11 hours to apply each sculpture onto his head and, amazingly, no digital manipulation is used in the quirky self-portraits.
He explains: "Constructing the idea/concept can take months. Most of the work I do myself, because it's important to make all the substantive choices when creating a new picture. But I do have trainees which help me with all practical kind of things.
Levi says his work is designed to 'unsettle' viewers by challenging preconceptions of certain materials and objects.
He does this by using familiar items such as stones and, in one unsettling example, small strips of carpet.
"A very specific unsettling reaction is invoked in the viewer when they are essentially forced to review commonly-held notions about a mere piece of grey carpet.
"The image succeeds in shifting the viewer's perception, be it in a very small way and about an unimportant subject."
Levi's work has been showcased across Europe, China and the States, earning him a number of prestigious awards that include the Photographer of the Year Award at the IPA International Photo Awards in the USA.
He says: "The work you see is not a portrait, but an information-rich image of colo...
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by OJO Images / Rex Features ( 824399a )
MODEL RELEASED Man and woman sitting on gravel outdoors with telephone receivers and world map
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NEPAL Changri Nup Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- In the danger-zone...morrain rubble on the Changri Nup Glacier. As the glacier melts, it spews out thousands of rocks, often destroying marker cairns and causing a hazard for travellers, like the photographer who almost died on a night crossing of this pass. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Mount Thamseku -- Dec 2005 -- Mount Thamserku usually under a blanket of snow and ice at this time of the year, now in mid-December 2005 showing very little of either, its glacier severely reduced in comparison to previous years. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Mount Thamseku -- Dec 2005 -- Mount Thamserku usually under a blanket of snow and ice at this time of the year, now in mid-December 2005 showing very little of either, its glacier severely reduced in comparison to previous years. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, a popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest (centre right) this glacier has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, with a glacier of Mount Nuptse in the background. A popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest, this glacier has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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NEPAL Khumbu Glacier -- Dec 2005 -- The top of the Khumbu Glacier, a popular climbing route to the summit of Mount Everest (upper right), has retreated over 5km from where Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norguay set out to conquer the worldês highest mountain in 1953. Scientists say these huge Himalayan glaciers are melting fast which could threaten Asia's water supply in the future having a devastating impact on the region's agriculture -- Picture © Jon Mitchell / Lightroom Photos (FOTO:DUKAS/GRANANGULAR)
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