Cake pops are one of my favorite recent food trends, not because I think they taste all that much better than regular old cake, but because once and a while we all make that cake that doesn't rise or come out just how we planned and won't serve to people but can't bear to throw a
Cake pops are one
of my favorite recent food
trends, not because I think they taste all that much better than regular old
cake, but because once and a while we all make that cake that doesn't rise or come out just how we planned and won't serve to people but can't bear to throw a
cake, but because once and a while we all make that
cake that doesn't rise or come out just how we planned and won't serve to people but can't bear to throw a
cake that doesn't rise or come out just how we planned and won't serve to people but can't bear to throw away.
Work perceived as
trending that sold out the first day included
pop comments on Pop (Sylvie Fleury's life - size crushed car that she painted with pink nail polish and posed against a wall caked with makeup; impeccable fabrication (Anish Kapoor's shiny discs that danced down every aisle); mannequin sculptures (Chicago imagist Karl Wirsum's robotic stick figures); body fetish (Guillaume Leblon's truncated ceramic legs and Jonathan Monk's kicking ones, Naotaka Hiro's body casts of himself made with his right han
pop comments on
Pop (Sylvie Fleury's life - size crushed car that she painted with pink nail polish and posed against a wall caked with makeup; impeccable fabrication (Anish Kapoor's shiny discs that danced down every aisle); mannequin sculptures (Chicago imagist Karl Wirsum's robotic stick figures); body fetish (Guillaume Leblon's truncated ceramic legs and Jonathan Monk's kicking ones, Naotaka Hiro's body casts of himself made with his right han
Pop (Sylvie Fleury's life - size crushed car that she painted with pink nail polish and posed against a wall
caked with makeup; impeccable fabrication (Anish Kapoor's shiny discs that danced down every aisle); mannequin sculptures (Chicago imagist Karl Wirsum's robotic stick figures); body fetish (Guillaume Leblon's truncated ceramic legs and Jonathan Monk's kicking ones, Naotaka Hiro's body casts
of himself made with his right hand).