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Artist Carves Incredible Food Sculptures Inspired By Pop Culture, Horror, Fantasy, And More (35 Pics)
Interview With ArtistOne of the most exciting parts of Halloween is all the creepy decorations carved from a pumpkin that we are eager to make and show off. But for some people, Halloween is every day of the year. They say anything can be art, so Italian artist Valeriano Fatica chose food as his medium. In his talented hands, watermelons, pumpkins, potatoes, carrots, avocados, cheese, truffles, and even tiny coffee beans turn into incredibly detailed sculptures that look just too good to eat. We've previously shared some of his most fascinating sculptures of the Night King from Game of Thrones and a terrifying dragon carved out from a watermelon, but needless to say, there is nothing Fatica can't sculpt.
Fatica spends hours playing with food and we've collected his best works. I hope you are hungry, because on today's menu, you'll get a delicious watermelon Gollum, a cheesy Jesus, an avocado Pikachu, a potato Cthulhu, a pumpkin Joker, a coffee bean Hulk, and many more. Don't forget to upvote your favorites and pick up your jaw after you finish!
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Coffee Bean Thanos
"I started to get interested in art basically since I was born, since my father is an artist. And since my family owns a restaurant, I started making art with food," the 32-year-old artist told Bored Panda how it started. Today, Fatica is one of the best food artists you'll meet and has titles of the world’s first and only truffle sculptor and the sculptor of the world’s largest watermelon carving to his name.
Turtle – Watermelon
Dragon – Watermelon
Fatica says he loves classic Roman and Greek sculpture, but he mostly draws inspiration from Japanese manga and points out Kentaro Miura as his main source of inspiration.
We asked the artist what inspires him to create his sculptures that are often infused with pop culture, horror, and fantasy. "For my invented sculptures I don't think too much of it; inspiration comes on its own. It happens that I get up in the morning, have a thing in my mind, make a sketch, and have it done," Fatica said, adding that bringing his ideas to life is actually the most challenging and the most rewarding part of his job.
Pikachu – Avocado
Gollum – Watermelon
Fatica can work with almost any food and turn it into something amazing you'd have to look twice at to notice it's actually made from edible material. We asked what food is Fatica's favorite to work with.
"I don't really have a favorite, but I like watermelon because it's the most difficult fruit to carve; cheese, because I get to eat the parts that remain; the coffee because it doesn't decompose, so I can keep it forever, or also sell. The one I love less is pumpkin because it's the easiest and the most popular vegetable to carve."
Dog – Pumpkin Carving
Chansey – Avocado
Carving realistic sculptures from food is not the most popular form of art—nevertheless, it requires the same dedication and time. We asked Fatica how long the carving process takes."
It always depends on which material and subject I choose. It can take from 6 to 30 hrs. The only thing that stops me from using more time is the fact that food decomposes. On materials that are different from food, such as stone, wood, etc., it depends. The process is divided into 4 parts: getting the idea, making the sketch, doing the sculpture, and making the video." The artist shares time-lapse videos of his sculpting process on his Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube, so check them out to see how it's done.
Night King – Watermelon
Drogon – Parmesan
Fatica says one of his favorite sculptures he has made is a Marvel character, Venom, carved from watermelon: "It's a real show to watch. I love it because you could immediately see it was a watermelon, but at the same time, you could realize it took a lot of work for its details."
Joker – Pumpkin Sculpture
Monkey – Watermelon
It looks like the monkeys bleeding down his eye. It still looks incredible tho
Fatica has built a following of 43.3k people on Instagram, almost 20k on Facebook, and has 29.7k subscribers on YouTube where one of his videos went viral with 2.6M views.
"I usually get a lot of positive feedback from people who admire and support my art. Just a few times it happened that someone was saying that it is a waste of food."
If you appreciate Fatica's work as much as these people, make sure to support his art by visiting his online store and purchasing his sculptures.
Watermelon
Rabbit – Watermelon
Lastly, Fatica had some personal advice for any upcoming artists: "In the first place, if you want to make it, you have to work hard, constantly, all the time. And most of all, you have to think about a good marketing campaign, especially on the internet, because you could have the best idea in the world, but if you don't know how to sell it, you won't go far."
The Mount Rushmore, 1,5 Kg Truffle Carving
Venom – Watermelon
Snorlax – Avocado
Anger – Carrot
Damn I wish I was talented like this. I'd make my whole fridge movie characters, and wait for my kids to find them.
Groot – Coffee Bean
Pumpkin
Minion – Watermelon
Jesus Christ – Watermelon
I thought it said "jesus christ, watermelon!" like somebody was disappointed in the watermelon
Watermelon Eye
Tyrion Lannister – Watermelon
Cthulhu Watermelon
Eating Beauty – Parmesan Wheel
Santa Claus – Watermelon
The Orange Walker – Pumpkin
Cheese Sculpture
6 Watermelons Fusion
Iron Man – Coffee Bean
Coffee companies should make and sell these. Maybe chocolate covered options.
Cthulhu – Potato
Dracula – Cheese
It's the historical Vlad Dracul "the impaler", not the horror movie Dracula. They have the same name as the vampire bases on the emperor.
Load More Replies...Dragon – Watermelon
Perfect Cell – Watermelon
Attack On Watermelon Titan
I love that you can see the progression of detail and his talent by his logo - from the cartoonish logo, to the fire font to his current paintbrush-like font
Amazing talent, but at the same time...it kind of groses me out. It looks so fleshy...but again, great talent offcourse.
The sculpture is incredible, but am i the only one who thinks "OMG, that poor turtle!" Some of these are a little too realistic for me to find appetizing.
These are AMAZING! Unfortunately, very temporary ;( I'd suggest move on to carving on soap/wood/sand or even ice. Less food wastage and sculptures would be more permanent. I know it's a allegory to life itself being short and fragile, but we have art that withstood a millennium - not all beautiful things have to deteriorate.
AMAZING! Although I wish, that she could've drawn Takumi Fujiwara and His Hachiroku coming down Mount Akina on a Watermelon.
I think it is very cool and genius that you have al that time to do that
I love that you can see the progression of detail and his talent by his logo - from the cartoonish logo, to the fire font to his current paintbrush-like font
Amazing talent, but at the same time...it kind of groses me out. It looks so fleshy...but again, great talent offcourse.
The sculpture is incredible, but am i the only one who thinks "OMG, that poor turtle!" Some of these are a little too realistic for me to find appetizing.
These are AMAZING! Unfortunately, very temporary ;( I'd suggest move on to carving on soap/wood/sand or even ice. Less food wastage and sculptures would be more permanent. I know it's a allegory to life itself being short and fragile, but we have art that withstood a millennium - not all beautiful things have to deteriorate.
AMAZING! Although I wish, that she could've drawn Takumi Fujiwara and His Hachiroku coming down Mount Akina on a Watermelon.
I think it is very cool and genius that you have al that time to do that