Home > Manual encyclopedia > Gonzo

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

Look carefully~ This is not Lego! It is a combination toy from Germany called Playmobil. The Chinese name is "Mobi". It is different from the stacking gameplay of Lego. It is a situational combination toy with a storyline. Playmobil goes Story-oriented, the toys are made entirely according to the storyline, so when you get Playmobil, you will naturally start playing with it. Since its launch in 1974, not only children have loved it, but also many adults have gone crazy for it. He has become a collectible! Pierre-Adrien Sollier, an artist in Paris, France, is also a fan of Playmobil, so he deliberately replaced all the characters in classic paintings with Playmobil to create a series of classic works full of childlike interest~

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"Liberty Leading the People" comes from the hand of the famous French romantic painter Eugène Delacroix, echoing Victor Hugos masterpiece "Les Misérables".

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"Mona Lisa" is one of Leonardo da Vincis classic masterpieces.

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"The Persistence of Memory" originated from the surrealist Spanish painter Salvador Dalí

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"The Last Supper" originated from Leonardo da Vinci and depicts an important night in Christianity.

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"Sunday Afternoon on Grand Jet Island" comes from the French post-impressionist writer Georges-Pierre Seurat.

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"Night Walker" originated from the American painter Edward Hoppers description of the depression and loneliness of modern urban life~

Use toys Playmobil to DIY world classic paintings!

"The Raft of the Medusa" originated from the French romantic painter Théodore Géricaults depiction of peoples despair during the shipwreck in 1816.

Replace characters in famous paintings with PlaymobiFinally, the original paintings have new vitality, and the meaning behind them no longer seems so heavy. Pierre-Adrien Sollier hopes that people can re-appreciate these classic masterpieces from a different perspective.