A crowd enjoys the light installation "CLOUD" in Marina Bay, Singapore. Canadian artists Wayne Garrett and Caitlind Brown used 6,000 light bulbs for the piece.
The "Mirror Box" creates a never-ending myriad of reflections for the Museum Center in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. Many pieces here are interactive, brought in by a young group of art-minded engineers and scientists.
It's pretty tempting to read within Marcos Saboya and Gualter Pupo's "aMAZEme", a labyrinthine maze constructed of some 250,000 used and new books.
Viewers are surrounded by vibrant colors and soft light as they make their way through Alan Parkinson's "Luminarium" installation.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdUsing mirrors, color, and geometric shapes on a massive scale, Daniel Buren transforms the rooftop terrace of an apartment building in Marseille, France.
Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama has an obsession with polka dots, and this dazzling installation, titled "Infinity Mirrored Room - Filled With the Brilliance of Life" is quite a unique take.
Visitors have lots of options when viewing Carston Höller's work at the Hayward Gallery in London. You even have the choice of leaving his show via the "Isometric Slides" on the roof.
At over 80 feet above the ground, Tomas Saraceno's steel wire construction in Dusseldorf is not for those wary of heights.
Crimson spheres create an abstract grid that surrounds visitors in Katharina Hinsberg's "Mitten," which translating roughly to "Middle".
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAt the Pearlfisher Gallery in London, you can really immerse yourself in the artwork - "Jump In" has a pool of about 81,000 white spheres, ready to be enjoyed.
Art duo Jan Plechác and Henry Wielgus constructed a temple of UV light and spatial vectors for guests at a contemporary design festival in the Czech Republic.
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