• @ug01x
    link
    222 years ago

    This is cool, but also makes me feeling like we poured asphalt over a masterpiece.

    • @rockSlayer
      link
      122 years ago

      I mean we paved over cities to make room for cars, so not wrong

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        02 years ago

        We didn’t really though. Even the Romans built roads, we’ve always needed a way to move food and goods.

      • @ug01x
        link
        52 years ago

        Exactly! Makes me think of things I have heard and read about historical sites getting worn down by visitors or people finding artifacts while digging in their garden.

  • @sixapples
    link
    62 years ago

    Until the weather becomes slightly warmer or colder or something drives over it.

  • @ki77erb
    link
    42 years ago

    There is probably not an easy way to do that on the spot. Do you think the artist traces out the dimensions and then makes the piece at home and brings it back?

    • Move to lemm.ee
      link
      42 years ago

      No they just pour in the mortar and then put the pieces in. The ones that do pictures like a cat or a bird or something premake the picture part and then fill in the pattern surrounding the picture afterwards. This particular french artist does it anonymously in the middle of the night.

      Here in the UK people spray paint giant dicks on the floor around the potholes. A slightly alternative way of annoying the council into taking action.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    32 years ago

    Is that considered legal? If someone makes a graffiti is illegal in most places. Would the police stop him ?

  • Dulce Maria
    link
    fedilink
    32 years ago

    An artist in Rouen, France also filled the stone courthouse’s WWII shelling holes with Lego’s.