As kids, most people would have tried to create some kind of primeval art on the windows by wiping away the grime and dust that’s collected on the backside window. Most importantly, many of us have tried to create slogans, art, and graffiti using the grime on our car window panes.
This time around, Scott Wade has created classics like da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa,” Botticelli’s “Birth of Venus,” and Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring using the grime that is collected on car windows. He also is known as the “Dirty Car Artist” and the guy lives in Wimberley, Texas. In fact, this kind of art must encourage you to not clean your car enough, and stay as lazy as you could get.
If only you could take classes from Scott Wade, or you could perhaps by a certain kind of rights and then use it on your car! When it rains, the grime washes away and you would be ready for a new work of art, with the help of some new dirt and dust. It is interesting how people could actually ignore such wonderful pieces of work that could even be created on the back seat of the car.