Schnitzen. Object 371 - 380, 430 total - sorted by: Price
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Curiosity
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Curiosity |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199901 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
1st arm: Hansel and Gretel stand looking around curiously. They don’t recognize their surroundings. There’s a fence around the forest because an investment company is planning on creating a golf club and leisure center here. And a nearby industrial area on the outskirts of town is already beginning to take its toll on the forest. The pollution produced by these industrial plants has already damaged the trees’ roots; many will not survive. This gives the investors a good excuse to cut them all down. Greedy poachers set traps for the few remaining forest animals and some die an agonizing death. The foxes worry about their coats of fur, will they soon be made into fashionable coats for humans? A badger hardly dares to leave his den, asking himself whether it might not perhaps be better to be a mole. The trees view everything that approaches their habitat with suspicion, nearly everything could turn out to be a threat. Nearly starving in the forest, Hansel and Gretel see a land of plenty just beyond. It smells of fried foods, sausages and everything they could possibly imagine.
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Crapulency
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Crapulency |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199902 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
2nd arm: Heavy and overfed, a young person lies surrounded by an abundance of food. He’s a glutton and can’t decide what to gorge on next: the sausage, the ham, the drumsticks or the chocolate? Maybe some wine or beer? He is obese, just like a good 30 percent of the Earth's human population (Die Zeit online,12 June 17). The people who lived hidden away in caves below him consider themselves lucky, as this excess of food allows them to "steal" a little every now and then – not enough to put on weight, but enough to stay alive at least. The food industry pumps more and more food onto the market, gluttony is what they want. Any leftovers end up rotting in containers. Enough to feed how many people?
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Chasing for money
Title |
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Chasing for money |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199903 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
3rd arm: But this is not the problem of the "Banksters" while they dance around the golden calf. Their greed for money is a cult that drives them to worship the golden calf. They have forgotten that there are also other values; they see, hear and dream only of gold and the $ sign, their devotion is almost religious. They have become victims of the dollar snake, which, in the beginning, approaches them in disguise. People try in vain to free themselves from their dependence on money. They are in prison with no hope of early release. There is no escape and, once infected, nearly all of them die a money-greed death.
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Buying voracity
Title |
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Buying voracity |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199904 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
4th arm: Once greed for money has made you wealthy — which can in fact happen (in 2017 0.8 % of the world's population owned 44.8 % of global wealth, while 63.9 % of the population owned only 1.9 % of this wealth — statistics for 2019, source Credit Suisse) — the temptation to indulge in a shopping spree increases dramatically (which at least is beneficial to the economy). The greed for things becomes the norm. Inspired by fashion shows, glossy fashion magazines, internet forums, influencers and luxury fashion houses, people buy until they drop. If they can’t buy castles, large yachts or Ferraris, they can keep themselves happy with the latest gadgets, cool gifts, or luxury handbags, which can easily cost 15,000 euros or more. Designer shoes and extravagant creations bought from famous fashion houses are stuffed into showy shopping bags — so that everyone can see where they have been shopping. An at the end of the successful shopping spree there’s time for a selfie before jumping into a comfortable Rolls Royce or Mercedes to whisk them home, the weight of the numerous shopping bags forgotten. Once at home, they immediately try everything on. Some will now start noticing that these clothes make them look a bit old – which brings us to the next arm.
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Greed for beauty
Title |
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Greed for beauty |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199905 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
5th arm: Perfectly styled people from the entertainment industry do their part to make us feel that we don’t look good enough. We never see them up close, but their appearance, and the way they seem to radiate eternal youth and freshness make us envious and we want to try to be like them. And yes, there is a remedy: today beauty can be bought. You can freeze away all your wrinkles with Botox . And there are many beauty clinics that use silicone to contour your biceps, breasts and buttocks to the shape currently on trend – anything you like and with little effort. Full lips, oversized breasts, Instagram face, penis enlargement? No problem. We now no longer have to worry about getting older. Greed for beauty and fame has created a huge industry that pretends to relieve us of all these worries. External beauty can be bought, and so hundreds of thousands worship their idols and forget to take care of their own well-being. To keep up to date, you look at what the social media stars look like, thus allowing yourself be manipulated by others.
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Greed in social networks
Title |
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Greed in social networks |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199906 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
6th arm: Without noticing it, we are increasingly slipping away from ourselves, succumbing to the world of social media and opening up to complete strangers. The greed in social networks to have as many friends as possible, to indulge in gossip, to forget that there is a real world, makes many become lonely and addicted. You define yourself only through your internet groups; “likes” are your lifeline. Since you rarely experience anything, you have nothing to tell and your friends online already know all the digital gossip there is to know. Reading books, the feel paper in your hands is a thing of the past. But at least you feel alive for a moment if you take a quick picture— but why and for whom in this fast-moving world? Insomnia and fear of being ignored online are the consequences. Our dwindling feeling of personal identity eats away at our real lives, allowing influencers to become all-powerful.
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Greed for power
Title |
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Greed for power |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199907 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
7th arm: With increasing popularity, they suddenly want to try gain power over others, by becoming politicians, for example. More and more magicians, musicians and actors are entering the world of politics. The greed for power has shaped the history of mankind for so long and has ultimately brought only death and ruin. Eloquent politicians can easily spread lies and find enough followers to implement their political agendas, no matter how wrong they are. A charged socio-political climate, history has shown, regardless who is behind the greed for power, creates only losers in the long run. Greed for power manifests itself in many ways: a show of superiority, the claim to be right, the wish to impose one's will. Whether it is Buddhists expelling the Rohingya, Indian Hindus robbing Muslims of their livelihoods, Muslims bombing Christian churches, or crusaders forcibly converting infidels: throughout history, the power of religion may have done more harm than good. Attaining power through a show of strength, physical intimidation or even the use of weapons, leaves traumatized victims and robs countless people of their ancestral homelands. Power through drugs, criminal organizations, politics and world religions can tear apart established social structures and leave irreparable damage behind. Although it was difficult for people to check propaganda for truth before we had the internet, the internet has made it even easier for people today to produce and spread fake news and conspiracy theories and to make others believe just about anything.
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Greed for our planet`s resources
Title |
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Greed for our planet`s resources |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199908 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
8th arm: The greed for power and the apparatus necessary to maintain it requires enormous financial resources. In many countries, these can easily be obtained through the exploitation of natural resources. Whether it is diamonds, gold or crude oil – they have triggered the greed for our planet’s resources, regardless of the consequences. We can expect major wars to be fought over natural resources. This greed leaves only losers and toxic wastelands in its wake— once the process of ruthless overexploitation has begun, only dead industrial deserts will remain. Nowhere left to live for people, animals and flora; everything will be radioactive; contaminated water sources will leave us without the basis for survival. We will have finally succeeded. Greed, growing slowly until it reaches a point of no return, is capable of creating conditions that will make Earth uninhabitable: with it we will exterminate ourselves and very likely most other life forms as well.
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The river taking away all greed symbols
Title |
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The river taking away all greed symbols |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Greed Octopus |
Size (cm) |
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82 x 1 x 9 |
Code |
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50199820199909 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-06-26 |
9th arm:Is there a way out? A glance at the history of humankind suggests a solution, painful but feasible. But it requires the destruction of the current order. Great natural disasters and wars have destroyed or wiped out entire civilizations or forced them to migrate. In Europe, the consequences of the Second World War uprooted most people, stripping them of everything that was important to their social status. The devastating tsunami of 2004, which cost the lives of almost 250,000 people in Asia, succeeded in breaking up political fronts and entrenched power structures. Greed for beauty and fame, political power and the greed for raw materials were all washed away with the floods. Like a giant river ending in a waterfall that swallows up all of the abominations spawned by greed, then pulverizing them through the kinetic energy of the fall. Social differences are temporarily erased and a new beginning can come. Has anyone learned anything from this cycle? I doubt it...
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Suricate
Title |
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Suricate |
Group |
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Wood Art |
Subgroup |
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Single Animal |
Size (cm) |
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14 x 16 x 4 |
Code |
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99025141641101-0439 |
Price |
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Created |
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2020-08-03 |
Hiding in the shade of a small rocky wall, this suricate escaped from being hunted. Its not alone, the friends are checking the area around and will signal as soon as they see predators. Standing in a piece of driftwood, itself the suricate is carved from mango wood. |
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