They’ve been on show at the Uffizi, the Met, the Louvre... now the greatest paintings on Earth are on display at an exciting new venue: your house.
Photographers from around the world have shared nearly 15,000 pictures with National Geographic’s Your Shot community as part of an ongoing photo assignment titled The Animals We Love.
Dutch photographer Niki Feijen has criss-crossed the world looking for crumbling beauty lurking beneath a thick layer of dust inside long-forgotten buildings.
Seven of the animals - who live in Maesa Elephant Camp, Chiang Mai, Thailand - have been taught to paint surprisingly complicated scenes using brushed designed to fit snugly in their trunks.
Emma Hacks, from Australia, will spend up to 15 hours painting a naked model live at the Rebecca Hossack Gallery in London.
John Poppleton, from California, creates mindblowing works of art painted directly onto human skin using fluorescent shades.
The masterpiece was created by food artist Michelle Wibowo, using a staggering 16,074 individual triangles.
The 33-year-old has been locked up in Kerobokan Prison, Bali, since 2005 after he was convicted of heroin smuggling. He only began painting in 2010.
'Red' Hong Yi produced colorful renderings of Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo, Brazil’s Neymar and Argentina’s Lionel Messi.
Oxford University found people were willing to pay twice as much for a salad when it was arranged to resemble Painting Number 201 by Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky.
Illustrator and photographer Sarah Rosado used cereal to produce renderings of famous musicians, including Michael Jackson, Amy Winehouse and John Lennon.
Maria Malone-Guerbaa, 33, from Limerick, Ireland, is able to create a perfect likeness of other famous faces including A-list stars Morgan Freeman and The Queen.
Chloe Dickey drew a huge floral design on a Port Macquarie beach on Saturday in under two hours.
A bizarre but strangely wonderful concept of classic paintings and fine art work 'improved' by a fat ginger cat, Fat Cat Art is rapidly growing its online fan base.
Tisha Cherry, a New Jersey-born registered nurse, takes inspiration from films, music, and celebrities, and recreates iconic images using everyday food.
An art fan who unwittingly bought two paintings by street artist Banksy in Central Park for just $60 each is expected to receive a $160,000 windfall when the prints go up for auction.
Artist Jim Bachor has been filling holes in the road in Chicago by creating mosaics which use the colours of the flag of the city and feature a fake serial number to highlight the severity of the pothole problem.