Images courtesy the artist
An anxiety-inducing new photo series called Equilibrium, from French artist Florent Tanet and collaborator Arthur King, captures moments that flicker between safety and danger, illustrated through delicately stacked objects that look like they could fall over at any second. Whether it's a set of vertically-stacked dominoes, matchsticks held together by torque and fingertips, or glasses stacked precariously atop one another, each photograph is embedded with a Freudian flavor for destruction."Equilibrium, a quest for stability using everyday life objects, is inspired by Tom Tit's classic book La Science Amusante," Tanet tells The Creators Project. La Science Amusante is a collection of parlor tricks, illusions, and experiments using everyday objects like cutlery and wine bottles. These experiments range from balancing a plate and four forks atop a bottle of champagne to making shadow puppets with your hands, and beyond. Peruse more of La Science Amusante here. "We tried to reinvent the illustrations of this popular science book at home," Tanet continues. "Each image represents a simple scientific phenomenon, like a magical experiment." Equilibrium was created for Feelings Magazine, and uses no photo manipulation; everything you see is real. Check out the full set below.See more of Florent Tanet's work on his website.Via Exhibition-IsmRelated:Here's How Designers Cut a Grid of Perfectly Isometric Food CubesArtist Shatters the Earth with CGI-Free Photography Tricks5 Photographers Who Are Hitting Big in 2016An Artist Discovers His Black Heritage Through Photography
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